[link removed] Share ([link removed])
[link removed] https%3A%2F%2Fmailchi.mp%2Fcis%2Fimmigration-reading-1920 Tweet ([link removed] https%3A%2F%2Fmailchi.mp%2Fcis%2Fimmigration-reading-1920)
[link removed] Forward ([link removed])
** Immigration Reading, 1/9/20
------------------------------------------------------------
Support the Center for Immigration Studies by donating on line here: [link removed] ([link removed])
GOVERNMENT DOCUMENTS
1. (#1) DHS Yearbook of Immigration Statistics, 2018
2. (#2) Latest issue of CBP Frontline Magazine
3. (#3) GAO report on DHS acquisitions
4. (#4) Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals ruling in Border Network for Human Rights v. Trump
5. (#5) Netherlands: Population statistics
6. (#6) Belgium: Monthly naturalization statistics
7. (#7) Greece: Population and migration flow statistics
REPORTS, ARTICLES, ETC.
8. (#8) Rasmussen Reports weekly immigration index
9. (#9) TRAC report on asylum cases in FY2019
10. (#10) CATO policy brief on immigrants’ deportations, local crime, and police effectiveness
11. (#11) "California’s Future: Population"
12. (#12) New working paper from the National Bureau of Economic Research
13. (#13) New report and feature from the Migration Policy Institute
14. (#14) Nine new papers from the Social Science Research Network
15. (#15) Seven new postings from the Immigration Law Professors' Blog
16. (#16) U.K.: New briefing paper from MigrationWatch
17. (#17) Report on the enforcement deficit in returning irregularly staying migrants
18. (#18) Human Rights Watch report on Rohingya refugee children in Bangladesh
BOOKS
19. (#19) Migration and Integration: The Case for Liberalism with Borders
20. (#20) Immigration and the American Ethos
21. (#21) The Migration Myth in Policy and Practice: Dreams, Development and Despair
22. (#22) Current Challenges in Migration Policy and Law
23. (#23) Reimagining North African immigration: Identities in flux in French literature, television, and film
24. (#24) Living Tangier: Migration, Race, and Illegality in a Moroccan City
JOURNALS
25. (#25) International Migration Review
26. (#26) Journal on Migration and Human Security
27. (#27) Journal of Refugee Studies
28. (#28) Population, Space and Place
29. (#29) REMHU
30. (#30) The Centre on Migration, Policy, and Society
Yearbook of Immigration Statistics 2018
DHS Office of Immigration Statistics, January 6, 2020
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Frontline Magazine
Vol. 11, No. 3, Winter 2020
[link removed]
Latest articles:
Border Crisis: CBP’s Response
By John Davis
[link removed]
Wall Construction Continues as Part of a Holistic Approach to Stop Illegal Immigration
By John Davis
[link removed]
Stopping Smugglers
How CBP's Aircraft Search Team uncovers internal conspiracies with the airlines
By Marcy Mason
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
New from the General Accountability Office
Homeland Security Acquisitions: Outcomes Have Improved but Actions Needed to Enhance Oversight of Schedule Goals
GAO-20-170SP, December 19, 2019
Highlights: [link removed]
Report: [link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Border Network for Human Rights v. Trump
In the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, No. 19-51144
Grant of stay of the district court's injunction pending appeal, January 8, 2020
[link removed]
Summary: The federal appeals court lifted a lower court's order blocking the administration from tapping into military funds to help construct President Trump's long-sought wall along the southern border.
The decision comes less than a month after Judge David Briones of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas dealt a blow to Trump by ruling in favor of an argument by El Paso County, Texas, and the Border Network for Human Rights that using billions in Pentagon funds for a border wall represented an overreach.
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Over 17.4 million inhabitants in the Netherlands
Statistics Netherlands, January 3, 2020
[link removed]
Excerpt: Half of immigrants from within Europe
Of all immigrants who settled in the Netherlands in 2019, almost half came from within Europe (of whom 85 percent from another EU country). Eighteen percent of the immigrants came from Asia, with India and China accounting for the largest groups. For 2019, the number of asylum migrants is estimated at 16 thousand, i.e. nearly 6 percent of total immigration.
In 2019, immigration from all continents showed a year-on-year increase, on balance. The same applied to native Dutch remigrants. Consistent with the previous year, 35 thousand native Dutch people returned to the Netherlands, while the number of native Dutch emigrants declined by 3 thousand to a total of 39 thousand.
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
3,893 naturalisations in October
Statistics Belgium, January 9, 2020
[link removed]
Summary: In October 2019, 3,893 persons obtained the Belgian nationality. The main countries of origin of naturalised Belgians in October are Morocco, Romania, Italy, Poland and The Democratic Republic of Congo.
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Estimated Population (1.1.2019) and Migration Flows (2018)
Hellenic Statistical Authority, December 31,2019
[link removed]
Summary: With respect to the above, the population of Greece on 1st January 2019 is estimated at 10,724,599 persons (5,208,293 males and 5,516,306 females), decreased by 0.15% in comparison to the respective population on 1st January 2018 which amounted to 10,741,165 persons
This development is the result of the natural decrease of the population, which amounted to 33,006 persons (86,440 births as opposed to 119,446 deaths of usual residents in the Greek territory) and the net migration, estimated at 16,440 persons (positive balance).
The population aged 0-14 years accounts for 14.3% of the total population, whereas 63.6% corresponds to the population aged 15-64 and 22.1% to the population 65 years and over. The ageing ratio (population aged 65 years and over to the population aged 0-14 years) amounted to 153.8.
Net migration is estimated at 16,440 persons corresponding to the difference between 119,489 immigrants and 103,049 emigrants. In 2017 net migration was estimated at 8,920 persons (112,247 immigrants and 103,327 emigrants, Table 3, Graph 7). It should be noted that immigration data also includes persons living in the country at 1.1.2019 as a result of the refugee crisis.
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Rasmussen Reports Weekly Immigration Index
January 7, 2020
[link removed]
Excerpt: When it comes to legal immigration, 48% say the government should be adding no more than 750,000 new immigrants each year, with 34% who say it should be fewer than 500,000. Thirty-eight percent (38%) favor adding one million or more legal newcomers per year, with 11% who say the figure should be higher than 1.5 million. Fifteen percent (15%) are undecided.
Sixty percent (60%) of voters favor allowing legal immigrants to bring only their spouse and minor children with them. Just 30% support allowing them to eventually bring other adult relatives in a process that can include extended family and their spouses’ families.
When businesses say they are having trouble finding Americans to take jobs in construction, manufacturing, hospitality and other service work, 60% believe it is better for the businesses to raise the pay and try harder to recruit non-working Americans even it if causes prices to rise. Only 24% disagree and feel it is better for the country to bring in new foreign workers to help keep business costs and prices down, but 16% are not sure which is better.
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
New from the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, Syracuse University
Record Number of Asylum Cases in FY 2019
January 6, 2020
[link removed]
Excerpt:
Wait Times, Representation, and Denial Rates
Overall, asylum applicants waited on average 1,030 days - or nearly three years - for their cases to be decided. But many asylum applicants waited even longer: a quarter of applicants waited 1,421 days, or nearly four years, for their asylum decision. Not surprisingly, applicants who were not represented by an attorney and thus less able to present an effective case received a faster decision than those applicants who did have an attorney. Figure 2 compares represented and non-represented asylum cases.
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Immigrants’ Deportations, Local Crime, and Police Effectiveness
By Annie Laurie Hines and Giovanni Peri
CATO Institute Research Briefs in Economic Policy No. 196, January 8, 2020
. . .
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
California’s Future: Population
By Hans Johnson and Marisol Cuellar Mejia
Public Policy Institute of California, January 2020
. . .
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
New from the National Bureau of Economic Research
Diversity, Immigration, and Redistribution
By Alberto F. Alesina and Stefanie Stantcheva
NBER Working Paper No. 26620, January 2020
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
New from the Migration Policy Institute
Beyond Work: Reducing Social Isolation for Refugee Women and Other Marginalized Newcomers
By Natalia Banulescu-Bogdan
January 2020
[link removed]
Refugee Sponsorship Programs: A Global State of Play and Opportunities for Investment
By Susan Fratzke, Lena Kainz, Hanne Beirens, Emma Dorst, and Jessica Bolter
Policy Brief, December 2019
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
New from the Social Science Research Network
1. Family Separation As Slow Death
By Stephen Lee, University of California, Irvine School of Law
Columbia Law Review, Vol. 119, No. 8, 2019
UC Irvine School of Law Research Paper No. 2020-02
. . .
[link removed]
2. Peer Effects in Stock Market Participation: Evidence from Immigration
By Anastasia Girshina, Swedish House of Finance; Thomas Y. Matha, Banque centrale du Luxembourg; and Michael Ziegelmeyer, Banque centrale du Luxembourg
ECB Working Paper No. 2340
. . .
[link removed]
3. In Defense of Nationwide Injunctions
By Amanda Frost, American University - Washington College of Law
New York University Law Review, Vol. 93, 2018
American University, WCL Research Paper No. 2018-10
. . .
[link removed]
4. The German Consumer Bankruptcy Law and Moral Hazard – The Case of Indebted Immigrants
By Mevliyar Er, Independent
Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance, Doi 10.1108/JFRC-04-2018-0064 (Forthcoming)
. . .
[link removed]
5. Enter at Your Own Risk: Criminalizing Asylum-Seekers
By Thomas M. McDonnell, Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University and Vanessa Merton, Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University
51 Columbia Human Rights Law Review 1, 2019
. . .
[link removed]
6. Sanctuary States
By Rose Cuison Villazor, Rutgers Law School and Alma Godinez-Navarro
Southwestern Law Review, Forthcoming
. . .
[link removed]
7. Social, Psychological, and Demographic Characteristics of Dehumanization: The Case of Immigration
By David Markowitz, Stanford University and Paul Slovic,Decision Research; University of Oregon
Posted: January 1, 2020
. . .
[link removed]
8. The Political Economy of the Virtual Wall
By Christopher J. Coyne and Nathan Goodman, George Mason University Department of Economics
Posted: January 1, 2020
. . .
[link removed]
9. Immigrants Learn English: Immigrant's Language Acquisition Rates by Country of Origin and Demographics since 1900
By Michelangelo Landgrave, University of California, Riverside (UCR) Department of Political Science
Research and Policy Brief No. 14
. . .
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Latest posts from the Immigration Law Professors' Blog
1. The Beat Goes On: The Trump Administration to Send Mexican Asylum-Seekers to Guatemala
January 8, 2020
. . .
[link removed]
2. When "Material" Loses Meaning: Matter of A-C-M- and the Material Support Bar to Asylum
By Tyler Ann Lee
January 8, 2020
. . .
[link removed]
3. Ninth Circuit to Hear Arguments on Whether Asylum Seekers Turned Back at Ports of Entry Should be Subject to Asylum Ban
January 7, 2020
. . .
[link removed]
4. DHS to share administrative records on citizenship with census bureau
January 4, 2020
. . .
[link removed]
5. Happy New Year! Trump administration seeks review of state DMV laws on immigration enforcement
January 1, 2020
. . .
[link removed]
6. US Census Bureau: Net International Migration Projected to Fall to Lowest Levels This Decade
December 31, 2019
. . .
[link removed]
7. Trump administration begin to ramp up DACA removals?
December 28, 2019
. . .
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
The Prime Minister’s pledge on immigration after Brexit
MigrationWatch UK Briefing Paper No. 470, December 31, 2019
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
An EU Regularization Directive. An effective solution to the enforcement deficit in returning irregularly staying migrants
By Kevin Fredy Hinterberger
Maastricht Journal of European and Comparative Law, December 19, 2019
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
“Are We Not Human?”
Denial of Education for Rohingya Refugee Children in Bangladesh
Human Rights Watch, December 3, 2019
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Migration and Integration: The Case for Liberalism with Borders
By Tom Farer
Cambridge University Press, 282 pp.
Hardcover, ISBN: 1108485715, $80.71
[link removed]
Paperback, ISBN: 1108707505, 212 pp., $28.99
[link removed]
Kindle, 2032 KB, ASIN: B07ZTQLWYH, $13.95
Book Description: Migration and Integration clarifies and proposes answers for all of the politically toxic questions associated with large-scale migration from the Global South to the Western liberal democracies. Driven by the conviction that the Alt-Right is using the issues of migration and integration effectively to batter the defenses of liberal democracy, Professor Tom Farer argues that despite its strength, the moral case for open borders should be rejected and that while broadly tolerant of different life styles, the state should enforce core liberal values. Examining closely the policies and practices of various European states, Farer draws on their experience, contrasts it with that of the United States, and provides a detailed strategy for addressing the issues of who should be allowed to enter, how migrant families should be integrated and cultural conflicts resolved. This remarkable elaboration of a liberal position on migration and integration to which moderate conservatives
could adhere combines powerful analysis with passionate advocacy.
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Immigration and the American Ethos
By Morris Levy and Matthew Wright
Cambridge University Press, 240 pp.
Hardcover, ISBN: 1108488811, $98.26
[link removed]
Paperback, ISBN: 1108738877, 212 pp., $20.99
[link removed]
Book Description: What do Americans want from immigration policy and why? In the rise of a polarized and acrimonious immigration debate, leading accounts see racial anxieties and disputes over the meaning of American nationhood coming to a head. The resurgence of parochial identities has breathed new life into old worries about the vulnerability of the American Creed. This book tells a different story, one in which creedal values remain hard at work in shaping ordinary Americans' judgements about immigration. Levy and Wright show that perceptions of civic fairness - based on multiple, often competing values deeply rooted in the country's political culture - are the dominant guideposts by which most Americans navigate immigration controversies most of the time and explain why so many Americans simultaneously hold a mix of pro-immigrant and anti-immigrant positions. The authors test the relevance and force of the theory over time and across issue domains.
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
The Migration Myth in Policy and Practice: Dreams, Development and Despair
By AKM Ahsan Ullah and Md Shahidul Haque
Springer, 221 pp.
Hardcover, ISBN: 9811517533, $99.99
[link removed]
Kindle, 2064 KB, ASIN: B083FYMG11, $89.00
Book Description: This book investigates the long-term impact of migration on development, engaging in a thorough analysis of the pertinent factors in migration. Migration scholars and stakeholders have long placed emphasis on the necessity of migration for development. At the heart of this book is the question: Has migration made development necessary, or is it the other way around? While existing literature is predominantly occupied with positive impressions about the migration-development nexus, this book challenges associated pervasive generalizations about the impact of migration, indicating that migration has not impacted all regions equally. This volume thus grapples with the different extents to which migration has impacted development by delving into the social costs that migrants often pay in the long run. With empirical support, this book proffers that some countries are becoming over-dependent on migration. A excellent resource for both policymakers working on migration policy,
and scholars in international relations, migration and development studies, this book presents a range of innovative ideas in relation to the remittance-development nexus.
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Current Challenges in Migration Policy and Law
By Emília Lana de Freitas Castro and Sergio Maia Tavares Marques
Transnational Press London, 128 pp.
Paperback, ISBN: 1910781770, $22.50
[link removed]
Book Description: This book emerges from those fruitful discussions as a collection of some of the matters presented, whose authors have virtuously stood out. Just as the previous books that arose from other TMC editions, Current Challenges in Migration Policy and Law gives the opportunity not only to experienced professors and researches but especially to young scholars to divulge their studies and present their experiences in the various research fields migration can be discussed, rethought and further developed.We are thankful to Transnational Press London as it believed in our aspirations as editors and it stimulated us to be protagonists in the process of editing and building up this book the way we believed it would contribute to the current discussions on migration. As scholars and young researchers, we are delighted by this opportunity created by Professor Sirkeci.“International migration is one of the most challenging and critical factors shaping the future of societies and
economies today. Its accumulated complexity challenges academics, politicians, professionals and citizens. Bringing together the voices of authors from diverse countries and backgrounds, belonging to a new generation of researchers, this book brings new clues to understand how modern policies are built and new tools to act for a better world.”– João Peixoto, Lisbon School of Economics and Management (ISEG), Universidade de Lisboa,
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Reimagining North African immigration: Identities in flux in French literature, television, and film
By Véronique Machelidon and Patrick Saveau
Manchester University Press, 272 pp.
Hardcover, ISBN: 071909948X, $85.25
[link removed]
Kindle, 640 KB, ASIN: B07WFQ3PHN, $65.97
Book Description: This volume takes the pulse of French post-coloniality by studying representations of trans-Mediterranean immigration to France in recent literature, television and film. The writers and filmmakers examined have found new ways to conceptualize the French heritage of immigration from North Africa and to portray the state of multiculturalism within – and in spite of – a continuing Republican framework. Their work deflates stereotypes, promotes respect for cultural and ethnic minorities and gives a new dignity to subjects supposedly located on the margins of the Republic. Establishing a productive dialogue with Marianne Hirsch’s ground-breaking concept of postmemory, this volume provides a much-needed vocabulary for rethinking the intergenerational legacy of trans-Mediterranean immigrants.
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Living Tangier: Migration, Race, and Illegality in a Moroccan City
By Abdelmajid Hannoum
University of Pennsylvania Press, 312 pp.
Hardcover, ISBN: 071909948X, $85.25
[link removed]
Book Description: Since the early 1990s, new migratory patterns have been emerging in the southern Mediterranean. Here, a large number of West Africans and young Moroccans, including minors, make daily attempts to cross to Europe. The Moroccan city of Tangier, because of its proximity to Spain, is one of the main gateways for this migratory movement. It has also become a magnet for middle- and working-class Europeans seeking a more comfortable life.
Based on extensive fieldwork, Living Tangier examines the dynamics of transnational migration in a major city of the Global South and studies African "illegal" migration to Europe and European "legal" migration to Morocco, looking at the itineraries of Europeans, West Africans, and Moroccan children and youth, their strategies for crossing, their motivations, their dreams, their hopes, and their everyday experiences. In the process, Abdelmajid Hannoum examines how Moroccan society has been affected by the flows of migrants from both West Africa and Europe, focusing on race relations and analyzing issues related to citizenship and social inequality. Living Tangier considers what makes the city one of the most attractive for migrants preparing to cross to Europe and illustrates not only how migrants live in the city but also how they live the city—how they experience it, encounter its people, and engage its culture, walk its streets, and participate in its events.
Reflecting on his own experiences and drawing on the work of Hannah Arendt, Edward Said, Tayeb Saleh, Amin Maalouf, and Dany Laferrière, Hannoum provokes new questions in order to reconfigure migration as a postcolonial phenomenon and interrogate how Moroccan society responds to new cultural processes.
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
International Migration Review
Vol. 53, No. 4, December 2019
[link removed]
Articles:
Immigration Enforcement and Migrant Precarity
Health and Mental Health Effects of Local Immigration Enforcement
By Julia Shu-Huah Wang and Neeraj Kaushal
[link removed]
From Open Doors to Closed Gates: Intragenerational Reverse Incorporation in New Immigrant Destinations
By Jennifer Jones
[link removed]
Indigenous Places and the Making of Undocumented Status in Mexico-US Migration
By Asad L. Asad and Jackelyn Hwang
[link removed]
Generation, Family, and Social Change
Partner Type Attitudes of Parents and Adolescents: Understanding the Decline in Transnational Partnerships among Turkish Migrants in Flanders
By Amelie Van Pottelberge, Emilien Dupont, Frank Caestecker, Bart Van de Putte, and John Lievens
[link removed]
Language Use and Children’s BMI Growth among Second-Generation Immigrants in the United Kingdom
By Sara Giunti and Filippo Oncini
[link removed]
Exploring Ethnic and Generational Differences in Gender Role Attitudes among Immigrant Populations in Britain: The Role of Neighborhood Ethnic Composition
By Senhu Wang and Rory Coulter
[link removed]
Selectivity, Immigration Policy, and Differentiated Outcomes
Educational Selectivity and Language Acquisition among Recently Arrived Immigrants
By Christoph Sporlein and Cornelia Kristen
[link removed]
The Impact of Tourist Visas on Intercontinental South-South Migration: Ecuador’s Policy of “Open Doors” as a Quasi-Experiment
By Luisa Feline Freier and Kyle Holloway
[link removed]
Gender, Work, and Migrant Precarity
Financial Crisis and Migrant Domestic Workers in Spain: Employment Opportunities and Conditions during the Great Recession
By Zenia Hellgren and Inmaculada Serrano
[link removed]
Serial Labor Migration: Precarity and Itinerancy among Filipino and Indonesian Domestic Workers
By Rhacel Salazar Parreñas, Rachel Silvey, Maria Cecilia Hwang, and Carolyn Areum Choi
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Journal on Migration and Human Security
Online first, December 20, 2019
[link removed]
Selected article:
DACA and the Supreme Court: How We Got to This Point, a Statistical Profile of Who Is Affected, and What the Future May Hold for DACA Beneficiaries
By Daniela Alulema
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Journal of Refugee Studies
Vol. 32, Special Issue No. 1, December 2019
[link removed]
Articles:
New Perspectives on the European Refugee Crisis. An Empirical Review.
Introduction to the special issue
By Theoni Stathopoulou and Terje Andreas Eikemo
[link removed]
Accommodation as Displacement: Notes from Refugee Camps in Greece in 2016
By George Kandylis
[link removed]
Safety, Health and Trauma among Newly Arrived Refugees in Greece
By Theoni Stathopoulou, Lydia Avrami, Anastasia Kostaki, Jennifer Cavounidis, and Terje Andreas Eikemo
[link removed]
Non-communicable Diseases among Refugee Claimants in Greek Refugee Camps: Are Their Health-care Needs Met?
By Signe Smith Jervelund, Oda Nordheim, Theoni Stathopoulou, and Terje Andreas Eikemo
[link removed]
Asylum-seeking Parents’ Reports of Health Deterioration in Their Children since Fleeing Their Home Country
By Christopher Jamil De Montgomery, Theoni Stathopoulou, and Terje Andreas Eikemo
[link removed]
Gender, Parenthood and Feelings of Safety in Greek Refugee Centres
By Frida Bjorneseth, Martin Smidt, and Jakub Stachowski
[link removed]
Experiences of Discrimination and Self-reported Health
By Carolin Rapp, Valentina Cardozo, Terje Andreas Eikemo, and Theoni Stathopoulou
[link removed]
Infectious-disease Screening and Vaccination for Refugees and Asylum Seekers Entering Europe in 2015–16: A Scoping Study of Six European Union Countries
By Pierluca Piselli, Mariya Samuilova, Kayvan Bozorgmehr, Giuseppe Ippolito, and Roumyana Petrova-Benedict
[link removed]
Questionnaire Design and Translation for Refugee Populations: Lessons Learned from the REHEAL Study
By Theoni Stathopoulou, Elica Krajčeva, Natalja Menold, and Steve Dept
[link removed]
Is the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire with a Trauma Supplement a Valuable Tool in Screening Refugee Children for Mental Health Problems?
By Karin Fangstrom, Anton Dahlberg, Kajsa Ådahl, Hanna Rask, and Raziye Salari
[link removed]
Is the Refugee Health Screener a Useful Tool when Screening 14- to 18-Year-Old Refugee Adolescents for Emotional Distress?
By Anna Sarkadi, Anna Bjarta, Anna Leiler, and Raziye Salari
[link removed]
Culturally Sensitive PTSD Screening in Non-Western Youth: Reflections and Indications for Mental Health Practitioners
By James Michael Perry, Camilla Modesti, Alessandra Talamo, and Giampaolo Nicolais
[link removed]
European Asylum Policies and the Stranded Asylum Seekers in Southeastern Europe
By Marko Valenta, Moa Nyamwathi Lønning, Jo Jakobsen, and Drago Zuparic-Iljic
[link removed]
Media Framing Dynamics of the ‘European Refugee Crisis’: A Comparative Topic Modelling Approach
By Tobias Heidenreich, Fabienne Lind, Jakob-Moritz Eberl, and Hajo G Boomgaarden
[link removed]
Identifying Refugees and Other Migrant Groups in European Large-scale Surveys: An Explorative Analysis of Integration Outcomes by Age Upon Arrival, Reasons for Migration and Country-of-birth Groups Using the European Union Labour Force Survey 2014 Ad Hoc Module
By Erling F Solheim and Daniel La Parra-Casado
[link removed]
Integrating Refugee Children and Youth: A Scoping Review of English and German Literature
By Paul Pritchard, Débora B Maehler, Steffen Potzschke, and Howard Ramos
[link removed]
Public Attitudes towards Refugees in Germany: What Drives Attitudes towards Refugees in Comparison with Immigrant Workers from European Union Countries?
By Nadine Meidert and Carolin Rapp
[link removed]
Effects of the Refugee Crisis on Perceptions of Asylum Seekers in Recipient Populations
By Lise Lund Bjanesoy
[link removed]
Does Individual Health Have Implications for Individuals’ Attitudes towards Minority Groups? A Case Study from the Greek Population
By Jonathan Hall, Carolin Rapp, and Terje Andreas Eikemo
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Population, Space and Place
Vol. 26, No. 1, January 2020
[link removed]
Selected articles:
Does moving in childhood and adolescence affect residential mobility in adulthood? An analysis of long‐term individual residential trajectories in 11 European countries
By Aude Bernard and Sergi Vidal
[link removed]
Revisiting geographies of temporalities: The significance of time in migrant responses to Brexit
By Anna Gawlewicz and Tiina Sotkasiira
[link removed]
Socio‐spatial inequalities and dynamics of rich and poor enclaves in three French cities: A policy of social mixing under test
By Kawtar Najib
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
REMHU - Revista Interdisciplinar da Mobilidade Humana
Ano XXVII, No. 57, December 2019
[link removed]
Approaches and perspectives on human mobility
English-language articles and abstracts:
Mobility
By Noel Salazar
[link removed]
The human mobility in the web of State words
By Gennaro Avallone
[link removed]
Territories of Mobility in Dispute: Critical Cartographies for the Analysis of Migrations and Borders in the South American Space
By Lourdes Basualdo, Eduardo Domenech, and Evangelina Pérez
[link removed]
Migration Mobility
a critical approach to hydraulic metaphors
By Gustavo Dias
[link removed]
The Migration Systems Approach Revisited
A Theoretical Proposal for the Study of the Migration System of Latin America and the Caribbean
By Marta Carballo de La Riva, Enara Echart Muñoz, María Del Carmen Villarreal Villamar
[link removed]
The central place of migrations in the reproduction of advanced societies
By Alejandro Canales
[link removed]
Rethinking migrations from a multilevel transition framework
By Marden Barbosa de Campos
[link removed]
From the age of migration to the decline of migration?
The mobility transition revisited
By João Peixoto
[link removed]
From uncrossable walls to transitable borders
By Juan Carlos Velasco
[link removed]
The United Nations International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights protection regime for migrants, refugees and refugees
By Renato Zerbini Ribeiro Leão
[link removed]
Immigration, the death of non-humans and the idolatry
By Jung Mo Sung
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
The Centre on Migration, Policy, and Society (COMPAS)
Fall 2019
[link removed]
Latest article:
Transitory Legality: The Health Implication of Ending DACA
By Marie L. Mallet and Lisa Garcia Bedolla
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
Visit Website (http://)
============================================================
** Facebook ([link removed])
** [link removed] ([link removed])
** Google Plus ([link removed])
** LinkedIn ([link removed])
** RSS ([link removed])
Copyright © 2020 Center for Immigration Studies, All rights reserved.
Our mailing address is:
Center for Immigration Studies
1629 K St., NW, Suite 600
Washington, DC 20006
USA
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can ** update your preferences ([link removed])
or ** unsubscribe from this list ([link removed])
.
** View this e-mail in your browser. ([link removed])
This is the Center for Immigration Studies CISNews e-mail list.