
Working Papers Migration Theory
... costs and risks of migration. Without denying that this is a powerful insight, which can for instance explain the continuation of migration across formally closed borders (Böcker 1994; Massey et al. 1993), we cannot simply assume that migrants will always be eager to help prospective migrants. As I ...
... costs and risks of migration. Without denying that this is a powerful insight, which can for instance explain the continuation of migration across formally closed borders (Böcker 1994; Massey et al. 1993), we cannot simply assume that migrants will always be eager to help prospective migrants. As I ...
Working Papers Migration Theory Quo Vadis? Paper 100, November 2014
... costs and risks of migration. Without denying that this is a powerful insight, which can for instance explain the continuation of migration across formally closed borders (Böcker 1994; Massey et al. 1993), we cannot simply assume that migrants will always be eager to help prospective migrants. As I ...
... costs and risks of migration. Without denying that this is a powerful insight, which can for instance explain the continuation of migration across formally closed borders (Böcker 1994; Massey et al. 1993), we cannot simply assume that migrants will always be eager to help prospective migrants. As I ...
3. The biographical research perspective in the
... ‘constitutes both social reality and the subjects’ worlds of knowledge and experience, and which is constantly affirmed and transformed within the dialectical relationship between life history knowledge and experiences and patterns presented by society’ (Fischer-Rosenthal and Rosenthal 1997: 138). T ...
... ‘constitutes both social reality and the subjects’ worlds of knowledge and experience, and which is constantly affirmed and transformed within the dialectical relationship between life history knowledge and experiences and patterns presented by society’ (Fischer-Rosenthal and Rosenthal 1997: 138). T ...
Biographical Analysis as an Interdisciplinary
... ‘constitutes both social reality and the subjects’ worlds of knowledge and experience, and which is constantly affirmed and transformed within the dialectical relationship between life history knowledge and experiences and patterns presented by society’ (Fischer-Rosenthal and Rosenthal 1997: 138). T ...
... ‘constitutes both social reality and the subjects’ worlds of knowledge and experience, and which is constantly affirmed and transformed within the dialectical relationship between life history knowledge and experiences and patterns presented by society’ (Fischer-Rosenthal and Rosenthal 1997: 138). T ...
The environmental factor in migration dynamics
... (Goldhaber, Houts et al. 1983); migration from human created hazards, such as nuclear waste (Greenwood, McClelland et al. 1997); factors determining land use in Africa, including mobility but also other factors (Guyer, Lambin et al. 2007); and migration during the Holocene 8,000 years BC (Gupta, An ...
... (Goldhaber, Houts et al. 1983); migration from human created hazards, such as nuclear waste (Greenwood, McClelland et al. 1997); factors determining land use in Africa, including mobility but also other factors (Guyer, Lambin et al. 2007); and migration during the Holocene 8,000 years BC (Gupta, An ...
PDF File - Institute for Governance and Policy Studies
... The story of Pacific Island migration is one of concentrated migration from a select few countries – largely from Polynesia and the states governed in free association with New Zealand and the United States – to a select few destinations – largely Australia, New Zealand, and the United States (Bedfo ...
... The story of Pacific Island migration is one of concentrated migration from a select few countries – largely from Polynesia and the states governed in free association with New Zealand and the United States – to a select few destinations – largely Australia, New Zealand, and the United States (Bedfo ...
Container Model - European International Studies Association
... uprooting of people from ‘traditional’ life worlds into a ‘universal’ rationalizing system. In other words, modernity is “...the socio-historical organization and classification of the world founded on a macro-narrative and on a specific concept and principles of knowledge” (Mignolo and Tlostanova 2 ...
... uprooting of people from ‘traditional’ life worlds into a ‘universal’ rationalizing system. In other words, modernity is “...the socio-historical organization and classification of the world founded on a macro-narrative and on a specific concept and principles of knowledge” (Mignolo and Tlostanova 2 ...
Migration and Social Transformation
... nationalist project, and this meant forgetting the history of conquest, incorporation and migration upon which European nation-states were based (Renan 1992). In this model of ‘methodological nationalism’ (Wimmer and Glick Schiller 2003) border crossing was seen as exceptional and destabilising. Soc ...
... nationalist project, and this meant forgetting the history of conquest, incorporation and migration upon which European nation-states were based (Renan 1992). In this model of ‘methodological nationalism’ (Wimmer and Glick Schiller 2003) border crossing was seen as exceptional and destabilising. Soc ...
Transnationalism in Question
... the limits of state institutions. The mass international migrations of the turn of the 20th and 21st centuries have entailed one-time return migration, repeat migration, and circular migration, as well as migration for settlement. Such flows leave large numbers of persons moving back and forth, not ...
... the limits of state institutions. The mass international migrations of the turn of the 20th and 21st centuries have entailed one-time return migration, repeat migration, and circular migration, as well as migration for settlement. Such flows leave large numbers of persons moving back and forth, not ...
Executive Summary Report - Understanding Migration
... gene pool, in population movement, language, and ways we understood this from a scientific perspective. Humans move and change. How do we know that? Humans move and change in all directions. I tell my story as I move. My story is affected by where I am placed and who controls that space. ...
... gene pool, in population movement, language, and ways we understood this from a scientific perspective. Humans move and change. How do we know that? Humans move and change in all directions. I tell my story as I move. My story is affected by where I am placed and who controls that space. ...