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398 result(s) for 'Comparative Migration Studies' within Comparative Migration Studies

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  1. Subjective assessments of well-being are becoming routine indicators, considering that material resources are insufficient to capture peopleā€™s satisfaction with life. Examining the unique situation of undocume...

    Authors: Claudine Burton-Jeangros, Aline Duvoisin, Liala Consoli, Julien Fakhoury and Yves Jackson
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2021 9:42
  2. Empirically identifying the causal effect of social capital on immigrantsā€™ economic prospects is a challenging task due to the non-random residential sorting of immigrants into locations with greater opportuni...

    Authors: Klarita GĆ«rxhani and Yuliya Kosyakova
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2022 10:15
  3. This paper revisits the comparative approach used by Penninx and Roosblad (Trade ... -1993. New York: Berghahn Books) to study trade unionsā€™ attitudes and actions in relation ... reassessed and its suitability we...

    Authors: Stefania Marino, Rinus Penninx and Judith Roosblad
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2015 3:1
  4. In the original publication of this article (Penninx, 2019), an incorrect version of Figure 1 has been published. In this Correction the incorrect and correct version of the figure are shown. The original publ...

    Authors: Rinus Penninx
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2019 7:23

    The original article was published in Comparative Migration Studies 2019 7:13

  5. Insider family citizensā€”that is, people who, according to their nationality/legal status and the possession of crucial resources for the settlement of their relatives in a foreign contextā€”occupy an especially ...

    Authors: Paola Bonizzoni and Asuncion Fresnoza-Flot
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2023 11:13
  6. Migrantsā€™ integration process and their labour market inclusion occur within distinct local contexts. However, the existing literature has paid little attention to the role of the local context and its relatio...

    Authors: David De Coninck and Giacomo Solano
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2023 11:23

    The Correction to this article has been published in Comparative Migration Studies 2023 11:31

  7. This article focuses on the labour market integration of highly qualified female refugees in cosmopolitan Berlin and smaller towns in the county of Brandenburg. Based on interviews with civil society organisat...

    Authors: Felicitas Hillmann and Burcu Toğral Koca
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2021 9:3
  8. This paper compares generations (G1, G1.5, G2, G3) of male Turkish migrants to Europe in their transnational behaviours: contact frequency, visits, remittances, property ownership and voting. We aim to explain...

    Authors: Jolien Klok, Theo van Tilburg, Tineke Fokkema and Bianca Suanet
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2020 8:46
  9. Beyond the economic and social effects of international migration researchers show regular exchanges between immigrants and stay-at-homes produce political spillovers in sending countries. As a broad body of l...

    Authors: Lauren Duquette-Rury, Roger Waldinger and Nelson Lim
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2018 6:35
  10. Care for young children continues to highly influence the life chances of men and women, even more so when they are migrants. For migrant women, childcare remains a particular challenge when their kin are abse...

    Authors: Karolina Barglowski and Paula Pustulka
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2018 6:36
  11. Whilst reflexive migration studies have criticised the use of categories such as ā€˜nationalityā€™ and ā€˜second generationā€™ in quantitative research, several gaps on how to develop such reflexivity remain. In quali...

    Authors: Milena Chimienti, Eduardo Guichard, Claudio Bolzman and Jean-Marie Le Goff
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2021 9:29
  12. The term ā€œsocial remittancesā€ was coined over fifteen years ago to capture the notion that, in addition to money, migration also entails the circulation of ideas, practices, skills, identities, and social capi...

    Authors: Thomas Lacroix, Peggy Levitt and Ilka Vari-Lavoisier
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2016 4:16
  13. Our paper focuses on current trends in refugee migration and job polarization. In so doing, we assess the role of refugee migration in relation to institutional, technologicalty 1 and globalization factors in ...

    Authors: Lars Fredrik Andersson, Rikard Eriksson and Sandro Scocco
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2019 7:39
  14. The global spread of the coronavirus pandemic has particularly dramatic consequences for the lives of migrants and refugees living in already marginalised and restricted conditions, whose ongoing crisis is at ...

    Authors: Claudia Bƶhme and Anett Schmitz
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2022 10:34
  15. Is there a place in particular that international migrants would call home? How do they talk about it, where does it lie, and what characteristics is it expected to have, given their demographics and patterns ...

    Authors: Paolo Boccagni, Bernardo Armanni and Cristiano Santinello
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2021 9:47
  16. In both Germany and France, perceptions of immigration, diversity and their societal consequences have undergone important transformations in the past two decades. However, existing research has only partially...

    Authors: Maria Schiller, Christine Lang, Karen SchƶnwƤlder and Michalis Moutselos
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2020 8:48
  17. This paper argues that parties abroad are the actors of a new arena for citizenship and party politics. The proliferation of overseas voting and the development of representative institutions for emigrants has...

    Authors: Emilie van Haute and Tudi Kernalegenn
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2021 9:27
  18. The Board of Comparative Migration Studies would like to use this opportunity to...

    Authors: Karin Milovanovic-Hanselman
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2017 5:10
  19. Following publication of the original article (Barwick & Beaman, 2019), it was reported that the article title contained an error. The incorrect article title was ā€˜Living for the city: marginalization and belongi...

    Authors: Christine Barwick and Jean Beaman
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2019 7:3

    The original article was published in Comparative Migration Studies 2019 7:1

  20. This paper discusses the limitations of harmonised sampling designs for survey research on immigrants in Germany and the Netherlands. Although the concepts for immigrants are largely similar in both countries,...

    Authors: Kurt Salentin and Hans Schmeets
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2017 5:21
  21. In this article, we examine whether migration experience provides an opportunity for Malian migrants to learn and adopt new political values and norms, and whether this translates into different attitudes towa...

    Authors: Lisa Chauvet, Flore Gubert and Sandrine MesplƩ-Somps
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2016 4:19
  22. The article compares the explanatory power of assimilationist and transnational frameworks with a historically informed generation (historical cohort) thesis that addresses the long-term cross-border impact of...

    Authors: Zoua M Vang and Susan E Eckstein
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2015 3:6
  23. This article addresses the intersection of ā€˜homelandā€™ politics and diaspora identities by assessing whether geopolitical changes in Ethiopia affect ethno-national identifications among Ethiopian-origin populat...

    Authors: Daniel K. Thompson
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2018 6:6
  24. This paper explores the activities of Swedish state supported ethnic associations (most of which are immigrant organizations), thus shedding empirical light on how immigrants organize with the help of state su...

    Authors: Olle Frƶdin, Axel Fredholm and Johan Sandberg
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2021 9:35
  25. By way of a commentary on Willem Schinkelā€™s ā€˜Against ā€œimmigrant integrationā€: For an end to neocolonial knowledge productionā€™ in this volume, I propose twelve propositions in order to rethink the academic use ...

    Authors: Adrian Favell
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2019 7:21
  26. The reception of asylum seekers in Italy has become an increasingly contentious issue: many actors, public and private, are involved at various levels of government, and cooperative behaviour cannot be taken f...

    Authors: Francesca Campomori and Maurizio Ambrosini
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2020 8:22
  27. Immigrants are increasingly participating in politics, publicizing their political concerns and contributions. How does such political participation relate to national majoritiesā€™ immigration attitudes? Previo...

    Authors: Judit Kende, Julia Reiter, Canan Coşkan, Bertjan Doosje and Eva G. T. Green
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2024 12:5

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