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Migração de retorno, diferenciais de salários e autosseleção: evidências para o Brasil.Queiroz, Vivian dos Santos 23 February 2010 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2010-02-23 / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / This study use data from 1997 and 2007 Brazilian National Household Survey (PNAD) and
the endogenous switching model of migration and earnings with self-selection to examine the
performance of return migrants to Brazilians states. Based in exploratory analyses of data we
observed that Southeast region have balance a negative net migration, while the Northeast
region perform with larger number of migrants driven to source. Compared to non-migrant,
return migrant is younger, more educated and usually employed in informal
sector. Additionally, it was verified that highest returns of education are related with high
level of education. The empirical finds, in turn, permitted to observe that return migrant of
male gender, with higher education, employed in the public sector or self-employer, resident
in urban or metropolitan areas earns more, in terms of hourly wage, than non-migrants.
Furthermore, the main attributes related with probability of return migration are male gender,
race (white), high education, family conditions (household head and children) and networks
(number of migrants in household). The finds also suggest a positive selection for permanents
migrants and support for negative selection of the return migrants, i.e., return migrants are
low-skilled in the group of migrants and they move to source due the initial migration not
have been well succeeded. However, the experience of remigration still increases the mean
wage of migrant in the state of origin. / Esta dissertação teve por objetivo analisar os impactos da experiência de migração nos
salários dos migrantes que retornaram para os estados brasileiros comparando com os que
seriam auferidos em caso de não migração ou permanência na região de destino. Para isto fez
uso dos dados das Pesquisas Nacionais por Amostra de Domicílios (PNADs) de 1997 e 2007
e de modelos de determinação conjunta de migração e rendimentos. Ao se analisar a evolução
recente dos padrões migratórios, constatou-se que o Sudeste apresentou saldo migratório
negativo, enquanto, o Nordeste configurou-se como maior acolhedor de pessoas naturais da
própria região. Também foi possível mostrar que o remigrado, em comparação ao não
migrante, é mais jovem, bem educado e está inserido, geralmente, em ocupações informais.
Destaca-se a importância do investimento em educação devido ao seu efeito positivo nos
salários e alto prêmio auferido pelos migrantes de retorno mais instruídos. Os modelos
empíricos permitiram observar que o remigrado do sexo masculino, com nível de estudo
superior, ocupado como funcionário público ou empregador, residente do meio urbano ou
metropolitano ganhou mais que o não migrante e que todas as categorias de migrantes
residentes do Nordeste recebem menos que os moradores de outras regiões. Os trabalhadores
que possuem maior probabilidade de remigrar comparada a não migrar são os homens,
brancos, com educação superior, inseridos em ocupações informais, moradores do Nordeste
ou Sul, com grande número de migrantes na família, chefes de família e com filhos com 14
anos de idade ou menos. Por outro lado, as evidências empíricas permitem inferir acerca de
seleção positiva dos migrantes não retornados e negativa dos remigrados, ou seja, os últimos
seriam os piores dentro do grupo de migrantes, o que leva a crer que a migração foi mal
sucedida. Contudo, a decisão de retornar foi consistente, uma vez que contribuiu para elevar o
salário médio do remigrante no estado de origem.
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A Long Way Home : Spontaneous Returns and Potential Returns of Syrian Refugees ExaminedKerbabian, Shant January 2019 (has links)
The recent wave of Syrian refugees’ spontaneous return to conflict areas in Syria is not a new phenomenon, various cases of return to areas that do not meet safety and security standards has happened in cases like Somali refugees returning from Kenya or Angolan refugees returning from Zambia and the Democratic Republic of Congo. However, the Syrian case is important to study in order to examine any new patterns or elements in refugee returns that could arise or could be unpacked. This study examines Syrian refugees’ spontaneous returns, to what is considered by the international community as unsafe Syria and discusses the reasons for return that were provided by refugees returning currently and refugees who answer the question of return. The study finds that the notion of “home” and “homeland” are amongst the most influential when it comes to the decision to return coupled with push factors like livelihood issues and discrimination in host countries, in addition to pull factors from country of origin like amnesty regarding military conscription. The study finds that refugees not returning do so due to starting a new life, not having guarantees of safety and having lost everything in their home country. The study confirms King’s (2000) argument regarding home country pull factors having a bigger influence in impacting refugee returns. This study uses discourse analysis as a method using the proposed framework of Teun A. van Dijk’s (1985, 2011), the primary data source are interviews by Syrian refugees on YouTube in the Arabic Language. YouTube was chosen due to the role it played throughout the Syrian uprising in providing news to Syrians. The analysis of the data will use a four-dimensional framework which dissects push and pull factors, then examines them through the transnational and diaspora theories for refugee returns and has the place-identity theory as an overall starting point. The study concludes by recommending the international community pays more attention to the psychological factors from the home country so interventions and programmes of return make sure refugees are safe, protected and not falsely lured into return.
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Aunque les cueste la vida/ Even if it will cost them their life : A study of irregular migration between Guatemala and the United States of America and the effects it has on the Maya communities / Aunque les cueste la vida/ Even if it will cost them their life : A study of irregular migration between Guatemala and the United States of America and the effects it has on the Maya communitiesÅström, Paulina, Elgaard, Esther January 2023 (has links)
Today, many Guatemalans flee the country and leave their home communities behind due to poor living conditions and high unemployment. Irregular migration involves many risks yet is for many seen as a necessity to live a purposeful life. Since attempts to improve these circumstances often is based on Westernized ideals and experiences, this study aims to portray the needs and attitudes from Maya communities in the Sololá region, Guatemala. To achieve this aim, twelve semi-structured interviews were conducted, one with representatives from the international organization for migration (IOM), 4 with mayors in the region and 7 with 8 Maya women who live in these communities. The study was carried out in collaboration with the nongovernmental organisation Natün who are active in the area, working to improve the Maya community's situation. By using the neoclassical theory, the new economics of labour migration and decolonial theory the experiences of the respondents were analysed. The results show that there is a broad spectrum of causes regarding why people feel the need to leave. Moreover, even though people have possibilities in Guatemala, they still search for a better life in the U.S. The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and IOM´s purpose was analysed and compared to the actual needs of the community resulting in the conclusion that there is a risk these organization base their work on underlying motives such as stemming migration.
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Return migration: socioeconomic determinants for state in- migrationPippert, John Marvin January 1985 (has links)
The central concern of this study is to determine the role of return migration in the changing economic and noneconomic determinants of state in-migration. It was hypothesized that the transition from primarily economic to noneconomic determinants of in-migration in the United States in the last decade was directly related to changes in the components of the migration stream itself; that is, that an increasing proportion of return migrants in the in-migration stream contributes to the movement toward noneconomic reasons for migrating.
This study compares the selective characteristics of lifetime and five-year non migrants, and primary, secondary and return migrants using Public Use Sample data for 1960, 1970, and 1980. In addition, it analyzes four economic and six noneconomic determinants of migration for 1970 and 1980 usinq a data set that includes published data on state migration and socioeconomic characteristics.
An analysis of the selectivities of migration has both supported and rejected existing literature. In a comparison of migrants and non migrants, migrants tend to be younger, better educated persons from white collar occupations with higher incomes and smaller households than non migrants. When migrant types are compared, return migrants tend not to be as well off as other migrants socioeconomically. They tend to have lower education, come from blue collar occupations, have larger households, be a little older and have less income than other migrants. The most significant finding is the distinction of five-year from lifetime nonmigrants.
The regression analysis on the determinants of state in-migration reveals that there has been a shift from economic to noneconomic reasons for migrating from 1970 to 1980. In addition, the relative proportion of primary, secondary and return migration has changed over time. Contrary to the hypothesis, however, the trend from economic to noneconomic determinants of migration has not been related to changes in the proportion of return this study points to the relationship migration in the stream. Rather, further research that investigates between secondary migration and the changing determinants of state in-migration. / Ph. D.
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The reintergration of South African political returnees / The reintegration of South African political returneesNcala, Nokwanda Hazel 06 1900 (has links)
This study examines the reintegration of South African political returnees into
South African society from a sociological perspective after the unbanning of the
African National Congress (ANC), South African Communist Party (SACP) and
the Pan Africanist Congress (PAC) in 1990. It specifically looks at the role of
liberation movements, government, the International Organization For
Migration (10M), the United Nations High Commissioner For Refugees
(UNHCR) and the South African Council of Churches (SACC) in the pre- and
post- 1994 period.
This study contends that for refugee reintegration to succeed, primary
prerequisites include a relatively good and sustainable economy and, most
significantly, positive governmental intervention. A central argument of the
study is that the ANC-Ied government has played a significant role in the
repatriation and long-term reintegration of political returnees. Of significance is
the economic dimension of this process since it facilitates reintegration at the
social level. The assessment of the role of the ANC-Ied government in the
political returnee reintegration process is undertaken primarily through the
Special Pension and Demobilization Acts of 1996 which constitute the focal point
of analysis of this study.
The findings of this research are that the International Organization For
Migration, the United Nations High Commissioner For Refugees, the African
National Congress, the Pan Africanist Congress, the South African Communist
Party and the South African Council of Churches played a significant role in the
repatriation and early reintegration of political returnees in South Africa in the
pre-independence phase. In the post-independence period, the ANC led
government played an important role in long-term reintegration through
legislative means, namely, the Special Pension and Demobilization Acts of 1996.
The recommendations of the study are that the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees should continue conducting large scale political
refugee repatriations because of its expertise in international repatriation,
programmes and processes of this magnitude. More research on the long-term
socio-economic implications of the refugee reintegration process needs to be
conducted in view of the fact that this area of study has not been sufficiently
problematized. Finally, from a policy perspective, there is a need for
governments with returning refugee populations to be more proactive in
addressing this problem through legislative measures. / Sociology / D. Litt. et Phil. (Sociology)
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Les enjeux économiques de la migration internationale sur le développement des pays d'origine / Economic issues of international migration on the development of origin countriesMabrouk, Fatma 28 September 2012 (has links)
Dans le présent travail de recherche, nous proposons, à travers quelques essais empiriques, un nouveau regard sur les enjeux économiques de la migration internationale et le développement des pays d’origine. Tout d’abord, nous commençons par étudier le lien entre la migration internationale et le commerce extérieur en nous appuyant sur des données bilatérales d’un groupe de 27 pays, choisis selon des critères bien particuliers. Les résultats mettent en exergue un lien de complémentarité entre le commerce et la migration. Par la suite, nous étudions l’impact de la migration à travers d’autres canaux de transmissions tels que le capital humain et l’investissement. Il s’agit de retracer l’impact des transferts de fonds des migrants sur la croissance économique des pays d’origine de court et long terme. L’impact est ambigu dans l’espace et le temps. Enfin nous avons choisi de mener une étude complémentaire, à caractère micro-économique, et qui se focalise sur la migration de retour au pays du Maghreb et en particulier en Tunisie. Elle explique comment le migrant de retour contribue au développement de son pays d’origine à travers le canal investissement. Les résultats attestent un biais régional en défaveur de la région du Sud tunisien. / The present research proposes an attempt at explicitly analyzing the interrelationship between the economic effects of international migration and development in origin countries. By relying on bilateral data of a group of 27 countries selected according to very specific criteria, we start by studying the link between international migration and foreign trade, and show a complementary relationship between trade and migration. Then, we investigate the impact of migration through other transmission channels, such as human capital and investment, in order to trace the impact of migrants' remittances on economic growth of origin countries in the medium and long term. The impact is found ambiguous in space and time. Finally, we perform an additional study, at micro-economic level, which focuses on return migration to the Maghreb countries, with a particular attention to Tunisia. It aims at explaining how return migrants might contribute to the development of origin countries through the investment channel. The results show a regional bias to the detriment of the region of southern of Tunisia.
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Integrace a motivy návratové migrace českých Romů - případová studie Velké Británie / Integration and motives of the return migration of Czech Roma - a case study of Great BritainRybář, Josef January 2019 (has links)
The democratic transformation in the early 1990s has brought Europe to the opening of national borders and has become an impetus for many international migrations. Since then, the Czech Republic has also become part of the very specific migratory flows of the Roma ethnic group. More than 75,000 Roma have already emigrated from the Czech Republic, representing one of the most vulnerable, socially disadvantaged and discriminated ethnic minorities. It is precisely Great Britain that is one of their most sought-after destination countries. The motives leading to the emigration of Czech Roma from the Czech Republic to Great Britain are balancing between "push" motives of deprivation and discrimination and "pull" motives representing an improvement in their standard of living. From an academic point of view, the absence of information on the living conditions of Czech Roma in the UK prevails, especially whether they are integrated in British society and what are the main motives for their return migration to the Czech Republic. The aim of this work is to deepen the existing knowledge about the integration of Czech Roma living in the UK in the context of their migration and to identify the main motives leading to their emigration from Great Britain back to the Czech Republic. This research also seeks to...
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Transnational Tongans:The Profile and Re-integration of Return MigrantsLiava'a, Viliami Tupou Futuna January 2007 (has links)
This study contributes to the 'unwritten chapter' in migration studies, namely transnational return migration, with specific reference to Tongan migrants who have voluntarily returned to live in Tonga. Return migration of transnational Tongans is not 'permanent' as their mobility pre and post-return is characterised by circulation or repeated return rather than staying at 'home'. In examining the circulation of transnational Tongans, two new forms of return migration are identified -- 'return for career advancement' and 'ancestral return'. These additions to a new typology of return migration represent better the contemporary mobility system of transnational Tongans and suggest a means for addressing 'brain drain' through strengthening the 'Tongan-ness' of the diaspora while simultaneously stimulating economic development in the Kingdom. Despite these positive dimensions of return, re-integration is a 'bumpy' process, and there needs to be a holistic migration strategy if greater numbers in the Tongan diaspora are to return and make their potential contribution to sustainable development in the Island Kingdom.
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Grįžtamosios migracijos sukeliamų mokymo(si) patirčių hermeneutinė analizė / Hermeneutics Analysis of Teaching/Learning Experiences Influenced by Return MigrationLukočiūtė, Lina, Mickutė, Roma 16 September 2009 (has links)
Magistro darbo tikslas – grįžtamosios migracijos procese, kylančių tapatybės ir susvetimėjimo problemų identifikavimas, taikant pedagoginės hermeneutikos analizės metodą. Pagrindinis tyrimo metodas – pusiau struktūruotas interviu. Darbe konceptualizuojamas grįžtamosios migracijos reiškinys. Atskleidžiama šio reiškinio pokyčio analizė nuo ekonominės, patriotinės sąvokos iki globalios tarpkultūrinės patirties sampratos traktavimo. Kadangi grįžtamoji migracija šiandienos kontekste apima ir vaikų grįžimą į tėvynę, svarbus faktorius tampa grįžtamųjų mokinių edukacinis procesas. Grįžtamosios migracijos pedagoginiame procese ypatingas dėmesys tenka subjektui, gebančiam adaptuoti ir interpretuoti užsienio šalies patirtį savo šalies ugdymo sistemoje. Edukacinės patirties perkeliamumas ir gebėjimas ją interpretuoti yra siejamas su pedagogine hermeneutika. Remiantis užsienio ir Lietuvos autoriais, analizuojama pedagoginė hermeneutika ir jos santykis su grįžtamąja migracija. Tyrimas patvirtina darbo autorių iškeltą hipotezę, kad re-emigrantų mokinių integraciją į Lietuvos edukacinę sistemą, sąlygoja skirtingas mokymo(si) ir kultūrinių skirtumų supratimas. / The aim of this paper is to identify the problems of alienation and identification, influenced by return migration, using the pedagogical hermeneutics analysis method. The instrument of the research – open interview questionnaire created by the authors. By analyzing the foreign and local academic literature, was conceptualized the phenomena of return migration. Was explored the transformation of notion of the return migration from understanding it as economical, patriotic idea to the concept of global intercultural experience treatment. Since the return migration of today's context includes the child's return to the homeland, the important factor is becoming pupils’ educational process. In the pedagogical process of the return migration particular attention goes to the subject enable to adapt and interpret the foreign country’s experiences in the homeland educational system. Educational experience transferability and the ability to interpret is related with pedagogical hermeneutics. The research confirmed the hypothesis that the integration of re-emigrated pupils in Lithuanian education system is determined by the different educational systems and cultural diversity.
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The reintergration of South African political returnees / The reintegration of South African political returneesNcala, Nokwanda Hazel 06 1900 (has links)
This study examines the reintegration of South African political returnees into
South African society from a sociological perspective after the unbanning of the
African National Congress (ANC), South African Communist Party (SACP) and
the Pan Africanist Congress (PAC) in 1990. It specifically looks at the role of
liberation movements, government, the International Organization For
Migration (10M), the United Nations High Commissioner For Refugees
(UNHCR) and the South African Council of Churches (SACC) in the pre- and
post- 1994 period.
This study contends that for refugee reintegration to succeed, primary
prerequisites include a relatively good and sustainable economy and, most
significantly, positive governmental intervention. A central argument of the
study is that the ANC-Ied government has played a significant role in the
repatriation and long-term reintegration of political returnees. Of significance is
the economic dimension of this process since it facilitates reintegration at the
social level. The assessment of the role of the ANC-Ied government in the
political returnee reintegration process is undertaken primarily through the
Special Pension and Demobilization Acts of 1996 which constitute the focal point
of analysis of this study.
The findings of this research are that the International Organization For
Migration, the United Nations High Commissioner For Refugees, the African
National Congress, the Pan Africanist Congress, the South African Communist
Party and the South African Council of Churches played a significant role in the
repatriation and early reintegration of political returnees in South Africa in the
pre-independence phase. In the post-independence period, the ANC led
government played an important role in long-term reintegration through
legislative means, namely, the Special Pension and Demobilization Acts of 1996.
The recommendations of the study are that the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees should continue conducting large scale political
refugee repatriations because of its expertise in international repatriation,
programmes and processes of this magnitude. More research on the long-term
socio-economic implications of the refugee reintegration process needs to be
conducted in view of the fact that this area of study has not been sufficiently
problematized. Finally, from a policy perspective, there is a need for
governments with returning refugee populations to be more proactive in
addressing this problem through legislative measures. / Sociology / D. Litt. et Phil. (Sociology)
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