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In: Journal of population research, Band 37, Heft 3, S. 213-242
ISSN: 1835-9469
"Serial no. 37." ; Shipping list no.: 98-0179-P. ; Distributed to some depository libraries in microfiche. ; Includes bibliographical references. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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A partir da observação de que os fluxos emigratórios portugueses não chegaram ao fim com o encerramento, no rescaldo da crise de 1973/74, das fronteiras dos países industrializados da Europa à migração de trabalhadores, o presente artigo procura analisar os fluxos emigratórios que se desenvolveram após o anunciado "fim da emigração portuguesa". Será argumentado que apesar de um discurso político e de uma prática de investigação que, por diferentes motivos, tendem a menosprezar ou a negligenciar a saída de nacionais, ela continua a ser uma opção importante para milhares de portugueses que olham para a emigração como uma opção importante e atractiva para ultrapassar os constrangimentos que enfrentam no mercado de trabalho nacional. No prosseguimento deste objectivo central da comunicaçãoa emigração portuguesa para a Suíça – um dos principais fluxos emigratórios que se desenvolveu, sobretudo, a partir de meados dos anos 80 – será utilizada para ilustrar o continuar da emigração e a falácia do final da emigração portuguesa.Departing from the observation that Portuguese emigration flows didn't come to an end after the economic crisis of 1973/74, the present article tries to analyse the flows that developed after the announced 'end of the Portuguese emigration'. It will be shown that in spite of a political discourse and a research practice that, for different motives, tried to despise or neglect the exit of nationals, emigration continues to be an important and attractive option for thousands of Portuguese nationals to surpass the constraints they face on the national labour market.In the prosecution of this central objective, Portuguese emigration to Switzerland – one of the main migratory flows that developed mainly after the mid 80's – will be used to illustrate de continuation of emigration and the fallacy of the argument on the end of Portuguese emigration.
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1. Migration policy reforms in Inida : some reflections / S. Krishna Kumar -- 2. Diaspora and development : critical issues / Dilip Ratha and Sonia Plaza -- 3. Migration and gender empowerment : emergin issues / Jayati Ghosh -- 4. Mobility of women workers from South Asia to the Gulf : stakeholders' responses / Rakkee Thimothy -- 5. The global economic crisis and governance of human mobility / Bimal Ghosh -- 6. Kerala emigration to Saudi Arabia : prospects under the Nitaqat law / K.C. Zachariah, S. Irudaya Rajan and Jolin Joseph -- 7. Internal migration in India : are the underclass more mobile? / R.B. Bhagat -- 8. Politics of conflict and migration / S. Irudaya Rajan, Vijay Korra and Rikil Chyrmang -- 9. Capitalist development and the informalization of labour markets in India / Moushumi Basu -- 10. Inclusive growth and economic crises : labour migration and poverty in India / Arjan De Haan.
Emigration in 21st-Century India is the first definitive exposition of contemporary Indian labour migration. The book provides a comprehensive appraisal of the policies, legislation and institutional architecture governing emigration at both federal and state levels. It posits that, geographically, emigration is now a more inclusive, pan-India phenomenon with many distinct features. It draws critical attention to the multiple dualities in Indian emigration, showing how the artificial distinction between a universal pravasi ('expatriate' or 'migrant') and a restricted aam pravasi ('common emigr.
In: Global Asia 4
As our increasingly globalized world alters the dynamics of migration, the ideas that migrants have about returning to their home countries have evolved as well. This diverse collection examines the changes and complexities of migration patterns in a range of Asian countries and cities, exploring how globalization and transnationalism shape and give meaning to the migrant experience. From Japanese-Brazilian transmigrants and Filipina students in Ireland to skilled migrants from India, the authors address migrants' backgrounds, ambitions, and opportunities to offer intriguing insights and propose fascinating new questions about the lives of migrants in today's world.
This chapter examines the state and local government fiscal effects of immigration for each of the 50 states and the District of Columbia for the three-year period 2011-2013. The authors focus on the individual as the unit of analysismore specifically, the independent individual. The panels analysis here attributes the fiscal costs of (and taxes received from) dependents to their parents. This independent-person concept best acknowledges that the fiscal costs or benefits of children are due to the decisions of their parents, independent of the childrens own immigrant status. ; National Conference for States Legislatures - NCSL
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In this ambitious study, Anna K. Boucher and Justin Gest present a unique analysis of immigration governance across thirty countries. Relying on a database of immigration demographics in the world's most important destinations, they present a novel taxonomy and an analysis of what drives different approaches to immigration policy over space and time. In an era defined by inequality, populism, and fears of international terrorism, they find that governments are converging toward a 'Market Model' that seeks immigrants for short-term labor with fewer outlets to citizenship - an approach that resembles the increasingly contingent nature of labor markets worldwide
In: Interdisciplinary perspectives on the new immigration Vol. 3
In: [Memoires]/Academie Royale des Sciences d'Outre-Mer, Classe des sciences morales et politiques
In: N.S. 46,5