1. Introduction -- 2. Explaining migration across international borders : determinist theories -- 3. Explaining migration across international borders : integrative theories -- 4. Geo-political economies of migration control -- 5. Geographies of migration, work, and settlement -- 6. Geographies of migration, citizenship and belonging -- 7. Conclusions.
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AbstractThere is little research on the relationship between welfare policies and immigrant entrepreneurship. Accordingly, this paper examines changes in three welfare domains: child‐care, health/medical insurance, and unemployment insurance in the context of France since roughly the 1980s, but with a focus on the 21st century. Given changes in French welfare policy, I show that immigrants' greater access to fluctuating, sometimes declining, but overall increasing spending in the three domains, can be positively correlated with slowly increasing immigrant entrepreneurship since the early 2000s. However, I also argue that welfare policies do not seem to have a significant effect on the levels and survival of immigrant‐owned firms in France. The findings of this paper should nonetheless be taken with extreme caution in light of the obstacles to analyzing this relationship. As a consequence, I provide an assessment of three possible research designs as a route towards better understanding this relationship.
The debate around the 'Global City Hypothesis' (GCH), and particularly the research agenda of the 'Globalization and World Cities' network, have been preoccupied recently with the business and technological dimensions of so–called 'global cities'. This article seeks to recover the role of immigration in large urban economies. Using mainly observations from European metropolises, I argue first that the GCH requires significant revision insofar as it can be used as a tool for addressing issues of inequality, and I offer five propositions for a renewal of the existing contours of the GCH. Second, beyond these revisions, I suggest a complete reformulation of the debate by linking it with ideas emanating from the literature on transnationalism.Le débat sur 'l'Hypothèse de la ville globale', et notamment sur le programme de recherche du réseau 'Mondialisation et Villes mondiales', s'est récemment soucié des dimensions économiques et technologiques des dites 'villes planétaires'. Cet article tente de révéler le rôle de l'immigration dans les grandes économies urbaines. A partir d'observations de métropoles européennes principalement, il affirme d'abord que, dans la mesure où cette hypothèse peut servir d'outil pour aborder les questions d'inégalité, elle requiert une importante révision; sont donc exposées cinq propositions pour en renouveler les profils existents. Il suggère ensuite une reformulation complète du débat en l'associant à des idées émanant de travaux sur le transnationalisme.
In: SAIS review / the Johns Hopkins Foreign Policy Institute of the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS): a journal of international affairs, Band 21, Heft 1, S. 131-145
This article discusses important similarities & differences in illegal immigration in Europe vs the US. The author begins by defining the terms illegal immigration & informal employment as related to national policy making. He then discusses the role of globalization in the increase of undocumented labor & the roles of multinational corporations as related to policy making, before examining the individual cases of the US & European Union & the various policies in each. He concludes with differences in the approaches of legal policy toward illegal immigration. 1 Figure. E. Miller