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South-to-South Migration, Reproduction, Health and Citizenship: The Paradoxes of Proximity for Undocumented Nicaraguan Labor Migrant Women in Costa RicaGoldade, Kathryn R. January 2008 (has links)
International migration has grown in both scope and scale in recent decades. Almost half of the world's migrants move between countries lying within the global economic South, yet scholarship remains focused on South-to-North routes. This dissertation is a qualitative study of South-to-South migration experience of Nicaraguan women living in Costa Rica. In the mid-1990s, Costa Rica surpassed the United States as the primary destination for Nicaraguan migrants due to the coincided effects of economic distress in Nicaragua and economic developments in Costa Rica, creating gaps in the labor market that Nicaraguans filled.During the 1990s, the number of Nicaraguan migrants tripled to compose eight to sixteen percent of the Costa Rican population; women make up around half of the migrant population. What does the experience of moving between destination and origin contexts characterized by relative geographic, cultural, linguistic, economic and historical proximity reveal about the often juxtaposed social processes of integration and transnationalism? To explore this question, over a year of continuous ethnographic field research and systematic archival review of newspaper accounts were pursued in Costa Rica and Nicaragua (2005-06). Participant observation and 138 in-depth interviews were conducted with a purposeful sample of 43 migrant women, of whom two thirds were undocumented, and 12 Costa Rican health care workers. For its symbolic and material value to migrants and host country nationals, the health care system was the lens for examining migration issues and experience.Study findings suggest that multi-dimensional social forms of proximity for this migration circuit do not uniformly facilitate integration or transnationalism but rather the "paradoxes of proximity." Nicaraguan migrant women articulated feelings of profound exclusion and ambivalence about their lives. For Costa Ricans, migrants represented a threat to national ideals of "exceptionalism" central to historical accounts of their national identity. Ideals included racial and class homogeneity as well as the welfare state's successes in providing health care for all. By drawing on multiple theoretical perspectives from critical and clinical medical anthropology, feminist and historical anthropology, the study illustrates the importance of attending to paradoxical, local health-related experiences as a reflection of macro-level processes of globalization.
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HAITIAN IMMIGRANTS IN DOMINICA: A DEVELOPING RELATIONSHIPMerilus, Jean-Yves R. 19 August 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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South-south migration : A Critical Discourse Analysis of media’s construction of Venezuelan refugees in BrazilCarvalho Badaró de Melo, Bruna January 2022 (has links)
The aim of the thesis is to contribute to a growing understanding on how Venezuelan refugees are being constructed by the Brazilian media during the ongoing refugee crisis in South America and the main discourses related to them. The fact that South-South migration has so far been understudied and the relevant and fast-escalating displacement of people from Venezuela are the motivations for this study. The theoretical framework consists of Fairclough’s three-dimensional model of CDA and the theoretical concepts of stereotypes and othering. Twenty-one articles about Venezuelan refugees, published between 2016 and 2021, were analyzed. The findings of the thesis show that Venezuelans were mainly associated with negative aspects, entailing two sub discourses: in the first one, they were constructed as the origin of diseases at the borders and associated with violence and tension, and in the second one they were constructed as exploited, underemployed and poorly integrated into the formal labor market.
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A study of the Socio-Economic Integration of Highly-Skilled Nigerian Migrants in Cape TownIgbokwe, Gordon January 2019 (has links)
Philosophiae Doctor - PhD / Migration is an important topic, not only for researchers in South Africa, but also for policymakers
and the media. It is an issue at the top of the national and international agenda. In the debate on
migration and the literature, voices of migrants themselves remain mostly unheard. The public
perceptions and policy-making are often based on fear, stereotypes and common myths rather than
reality. In this study, the researcher aimed to examine the socio-economic integration challenges of
highly-skilled Nigerian migrants and how they may help contribute their skills towards the socioeconomic
development of South Africa to potentially inform the national migration policy, as well as
future research.
Methodologically, the researcher conducted a mixed-method study using an interpretive paradigm.
Data were derived from 22 semi-structured interviews and six in-depth interviews. The study used a
combination of purposive and snowballing sampling techniques, where semi-structured and in-depth
interviews, as well as observations, were also carried out. Data gathered were analysed using thematic
analysis.
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