create a website

Worlds in Motion Redux? Expanding Migration Theories and Their Interconnections. (2024). Riosmena, Fernando.
In: Population and Development Review.
RePEc:bla:popdev:v:50:y:2024:i:3:p:677-726.

Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

Cited: 1

Citations received by this document

Cites: 210

References cited by this document

Cocites: 30

Documents which have cited the same bibliography

Coauthors: 0

Authors who have wrote about the same topic

Citations

Citations received by this document

  1. Gender dynamics in international migration and social networks. (2025). Anastasiadou, Athina ; Carrasco, Jos Ignacio ; Akbaritabar, Aliakbar.
    In: MPIDR Working Papers.
    RePEc:dem:wpaper:wp-2025-004.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

References

References cited by this document

  1. Abarcar, Paolo, and, Caroline Theoharides. 2024. “Medical Worker Migration and Origin‐Country Human Capital: Evidence from Us Visa Policy.” Review of Economics and Statistics 106(1): 20–35.

  2. Abel, Guy J, Nikola Sander, and Fernando Riosmena. 2014. “The Future of International Migration.” In World Population and Human Capital in the Twenty‐First Century, edited by W. Lutz, W.P. Butz, and K. Samir, 333–396. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  3. Abreu, Alexandre. 2012. “The New Economics of Labor Migration: Beware of Neoclassicals Bearing Gifts.” Forum for Social Economics 41(1): 46–67.

  4. Agarwala, Rina. 2022. The Migration‐Development Regime: How Class Shapes Indian Emigration. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  5. AlShehabi, Omar. 2015. “Histories of Migration to the Gulf.”In Transit States: Labour, Migration and Citizenship in the Gulf, edited by Abdulhadi Khalaf, Omar AlShehabi, and Adam Hanieh, 3–38. London: Pluto Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  6. Amenta, Edwin, and Kelly M Ramsey. 2010. “Institutional Theory.” In Handbook of Politics: State and Society in Global Perspective, edited by Samuel Idowu, René Schmidpeter, Nicholas Capaldi, Liangrong Zu, Mara Del Baldo, and Rute Abreu, 15–39. Cham: Springer.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  7. Angelucci, M. 2012. “Us Border Enforcement and the Net Flow of Mexican Illegal Migration.” Economic Development and Cultural Change 60(2): 311–357.

  8. Angelucci, Manuela. 2015. “Migration and Financial Constraints: Evidence from Mexico.” Review of Economics and Statistics 97(1): 224–228.

  9. Appadurai, Arjun. 1996. Modernity at Large: Cultural Dimensions of Globalization. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  10. Arango, Joaquin. 2000. “Explaining Migration: A Critical View.” International Social Science Journal 52(165): 283–296.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  11. Arar, Rawan Mazen. 2016. “How Political Migrants' Networks Differ from Those of Economic Migrants: ‘Strategic Anonymity’ among Iraqi Refugees in Jordan.” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 42(3): 519–535.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  12. Arar, Rawan, and David Scott FitzGerald. 2022. The Refugee System: A Sociological Approach. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  13. Asad, Asad L. 2023. Engage and Evade: How Latino Immigrant Families Manage Surveillance in Everyday Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  14. Bakewell, Oliver. 2010. “Some Reflections on Structure and Agency in Migration Theory.” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 36(10): 1689–1708.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  15. Bashi, Vilna. 2007. Survival of the Knitted: Immigrant Social Networks in a Stratified World. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  16. Beauchemin, Cris. 2014. “A Manifesto for Quantitative Multi‐Sited Approaches to International Migration.” International Migration Review 48(4): 921–938.

  17. Bélanger, Danièle, and Rachel Silvey. 2020. “An Im/Mobility Turn: Power Geometries of Care and Migration.” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 46(16): 3423–3440.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  18. Bell‐Martin, Rebecca V, and Jerome F Marston. 2022. “Migration Research in Violent Areas.” In The Routledge History of Modern Latin American Migration, edited by Andreas E. Feldmann, Xochitl Bada, Jorge Durand, Stephanie Schütze, 412–425. London: Routledge.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  19. Benson, Michaela, and Nick Osbaldiston. 2014. Understanding Lifestyle Migration: Theoretical Approaches to Migration and the Quest for a Better Way of Life. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  20. Bernard, Aude, and Sergi Vidal. 2023. “Linking Internal and International Migration over the Life Course: A Sequence Analysis of Individual Migration Trajectories in Europe.” Population Studies 77(3): 515–537.

  21. Betts, Alexander. 2013. Survival Migration: Failed Governance and the Crisis of Displacement. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  22. Bharadwaj, Prashant, Asim Khwaja, and Atif Mian. 2008. “The Big March: Migratory Flows after the Partition of India.” Economic and Political Weekly 43(35): 39‐49.

  23. Black, Richard, Nigel W Arnell, W Neil Adger, David Thomas, and Andrew Geddes. 2013. “Migration, Immobility and Displacement Outcomes Following Extreme Events.” Environmental Science & Policy 27: S32–S43.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  24. Bloom, David E., and David Canning. 2008. “Global Demographic Change: Dimensions and Economic Significance.” Population and Development Review 34: 17‐51.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  25. Bodvarsson, Örn B, Nicole B Simpson, and Chad Sparber. 2015. “Migration Theory.” In Handbook of the Economics of International Migration pp. 3–51 Amsterdam: Elsevier.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  26. Bourdieu, P. 1985. “The Forms of Capital.” In Handbook of Theory and Research for the Sociology of Education, edited by J.G. Richardson. New York: Greenwood Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  27. Boustan, Leah Platt. 2007. “Were Jews Political Refugees or Economic Migrants? Assessing the Persecution Theory of Jewish Emigration, 1881–1914.” The New Comparative Economic History: Essays in Honor of Jeffrey G. Williamson, edited by Timothy J. Hatton, Kevin H O'Rourke, and Alan M Taylor, 267–290. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  28. Bowman, Catherine, and Jennifer Bair. 2017. “From Cultural Sojourner to Guestworker? The Historical Transformation and Contemporary Significance of the J‐1 Visa Summer Work Travel Program.” Labor History 58(1): 1–25.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  29. Brettell, Caroline B, and James F Hollifield. 2022. Migration Theory: Talking across Disciplines. London: Routledge.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  30. Brettell, Caroline, and James Frank Hollifield. 2015. Migration Theory: Talking across Disciplines. New York: Routledge.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  31. Buchan, James, James Campbell, Ibadat Dhillon, and Anita Charlesworth. 2019. “Labour Market Change and the International Mobility of Health Workers.” Health Foundation working paper 5. The Health Foundation.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  32. Burkham, Jonathan Mann. 2014. “The End of Migration from Atotonilco El Bajo to Milwaukee: Breakdown of a Transnational Labor Market.” Journal of Latin American Geography 13(3): 113–136.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  33. Caballero, María Esther, Brian Cadena, and Brian K Kovak. 2021. “The International Transmission of Local Economic Shocks through Migrant Networks.” Working Paper 28696. National Bureau of Economic Research.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  34. Caballero, Ricardo J. 2010. “Creative Destruction.” In Economic Growth, 24–29. Berlin: Springer. Calarco, Jessica. Forthcoming. Holding It Together: How Women Became America's Social Safety Net. New York: Portfolio.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  35. Calavita, Kitty. 1992. Inside the State: The Bracero Program, Immigration, and the Ins. New York: Routledge.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  36. Camminga, B. 2020. “Encamped within a Camp: Transgender Refugees and Kakuma Refugee Camp (Kenya).” In Invisibility in African Displacements, edited by Jesper Bjarnesen and Simon Turner, 36–52. New Delhi, India: Bloomsbury Publishing.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  37. Carling, Jørgen. 2002. “Migration in the Age of Involuntary Immobility: Theoretical Reflections and Cape Verdean Experiences.” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 28(1): 5–42.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  38. Carrillo, Héctor. 2018. Pathways of Desire: The Sexual Migration of Mexican Gay Men. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  39. Cattaneo, Cristina, and Giovanni Peri. 2016. “The Migration Response to Increasing Temperatures.” Journal of Development Economics. 122: 127–146.

  40. Chavez, Leo. 2013. The Latino Threat: Constructing Immigrants, Citizens, and the Nation, Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  41. Chávez, Sergio. 2016. Border Lives: Fronterizos, Transnational Migrants, and Commuters. Tijuana, Mexico: Oxford University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  42. Clemens, Michael A. 2020. “The Emigration Life Cycle: How Development Shapes Emigration from Poor Countries.” IZA Discussion Paper No. 13614. Bonn, Germany: IZA.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  43. Constant, Amelie, and Douglas S. Massey. 2002. “Return Migration by German Guestworkers: Neoclassical versus New Economic Theories.” International Migration 40(4): 5–38.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  44. Cook‐Martín, David. 2013. The Scramble for Citizens: Dual Nationality and State Competition for Immigrants, Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  45. Coutin, Susan Bibler. 2000. Legalizing Moves: Salvadoran Immigrants' Struggle for U.S. Residency. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  46. Cranford, Cynthia J. 2005. “Networks of Exploitation: Immigrant Labor and the Restructuring of the Los Angeles Janitorial Industry.” Social Problems 52(3): 379–397.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  47. Croucher, Sheila. 2013. “The Gendered Spatialities of Lifestyle Migration.” In Contested Spatialities, Lifestyle Migration and Residential Tourism, edited by Michael Janoschka and Heiko Haas, pp. 15–28. London: Routledge.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  48. Curran, Sara R., Filiz Garip, Chang Y. Chung, and Kanchana Tangchonlatip. 2005. “Gendered Migrant Social Capital: Evidence from Thailand.” Social Forces 84(1): 225–255.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  49. Czaika, Mathias, Jakub Bijak, and Toby Prike. 2021. “Migration Decision‐Making and Its Key Dimensions.” The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 697(1): 15–31.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  50. De Bel‐Air, Françoise. 2015. “Demography, Migration, and the Labour Market in the UAE.” GLMM‐EN‐No. 1/2018. Jeddah: GLMM.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  51. De Genova, Nicholas P. 2002. “Migrant “Illegality” and Deportability in Everyday Life.” Annual Review of Anthropology 31: 419–447.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  52. de Haas, Hein, Mathias Czaika, Marie‐Laurence Flahaux, Edo Mahendra, Katharina Natter, Simona Vezzoli, and María Villares‐Varela. 2019. “International Migration: Trends, Determinants, and Policy Effects.” Population and Development Review 45(4): 885–922.

  53. de Haas, Hein. 2010. “The Internal Dynamics of Migration Processes: A Theoretical Inquiry.” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 36(10): 1587–1617.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  54. De Jong, Gordon F, Brenda Davis Root, Robert W Gardner, James T Fawcett, and Ricardo G Abad. 1985. “Migration Intentions and Behavior: Decision Making in a Rural Philippine Province.” Population and Environment 8(1‐2): 41–62.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  55. Del Río, Coral, and Olga Alonso‐Villar. 2015. “The Evolution of Occupational Segregation in the United States, 1940–2010: Gains and Losses of Gender–Race/Ethnicity Groups.” Demography 52(3): 967‐988.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  56. Dillon, Andrew, Valerie Mueller, and Sheu Salau. 2011. “Migratory Responses to Agricultural Risk in Northern Nigeria.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 93(4): 1048–1061.

  57. Dinç, Cüneyt. 2015. “Gastarbeiter in Germany.” The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Race, Ethnicity, and Nationalism: 1–4. Oxford, UK: Wiley Blackwell.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  58. Duany, Jorge. 2011. Blurred Borders: Transnational Migration between the Hispanic Caribbean and the United States. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  59. Dunn, Elizabeth Cullen. 2018. No Path Home: Humanitarian Camps and the Grief of Displacement. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  60. Durand, Jorge. 2004. “From Traitors to Heroes: 100 Years of Mexican Migration Policies.” Migration Information Source. https://www.migrationpolicy.org/article/traitors‐heroes‐100‐years‐mexican‐migration‐policies.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  61. Durand, Jorgeand, and Patricia Arias. 2005. La Vida En El Norte: Historia E Iconografía De La Migración México‐Estados Unidos. El Colegio de San Luis: Universidad de Guadalajara.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  62. Eakin, Hallie Catherine. 2006. Weathering Risk in Rural Mexico: Climatic, Institutional, and Economic Change. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  63. Engbersen, Godfried, Erik Snel, and Alina Esteves. 2016. “Migration Mechanisms of the Middle Range: On the Concept of Reverse Cumulative Causation.” In Beyond Networks: Migration, Diasporas, and Citizenship, edited by Oliver Bakewell, Godfried Engbersen, Maria Lucinda Fonseca, and Cindy Horst, pp. 205–230. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  64. Entwisle, Barbara, Nathalie E Williams, Ashton M Verdery, Ronald R Rindfuss, Stephen J Walsh, George P Malanson, Peter J Mucha, Brian G Frizzelle, Philip M McDaniel, and Xiaozheng Yao. 2016. “Climate Shocks and Migration: An Agent‐Based Modeling Approach.” Population and Environment 38: 47–71.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  65. Fernández Casanueva, Carmen, and Arli Juárez Paulín. 2019. “The Farthest Points North and South: Tapachula and Tijuana as Forced Immobility Scenarios of Migrants, Internal Asylum Seekers and Deported and Internal Displaced People.” Península 14(2): 155–174.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  66. FitzGerald, David Scott. 2019. Refuge Beyond Reach: How Rich Democracies Repel Asylum Seekers. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  67. FitzGerald, David, and David Cook‐Martín. 2014. Culling the Masses: The Democratic Origins of Racist Immigration Policy in the Americas. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  68. Fitzgerald, David. 2009. A Nation of Emigrants: How Mexico Manages Its Migration. Berkeley: University of California Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  69. Flores‐Yeffal, Nadia Y. 2013. Migration‐Trust Networks: Social Cohesion in Mexican Us‐Bound Emigration. College Station: Texas A&M University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  70. Flores, René D, and Ariela Schachter. 2018. “Who Are the “Illegals”? The Social Construction of Illegality in the United States.” American Sociological Review 83(5): 839–868.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  71. Frydenlund, Shae, and Elizabeth Cullen Dunn. 2022. “Refugees and Racial Capitalism: Meatpacking and the Primitive Accumulation of Labor.” Political Geography 95: 102575.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  72. Fujita, Masahisa, and Jacques‐François Thisse. 2009. “New Economic Geography: An Appraisal on the Occasion of Paul Krugman's 2008 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences.” Regional Science and Urban Economics 39(2): 109–119.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  73. Fussell, Elizabeth. 2012. “Space, Time, and Volition: Dimensions of Migration Theory.” In Oxford Handbook of the Politics of International Migration, pp. 1–34. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  74. Garcia, Carlos. 2005. “Buscando Trabajo: Social Networking among Immigrants from Mexico to the United States.” Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences 27(1): 3–22.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  75. Garip, Filiz. 2008. “Social Capital and Migration: How Do Similar Resources Lead to Divergent Outcomes?” Demography 45(3): 591–617.

  76. Garip, Filiz. 2012. “Discovering Diverse Mechanisms of Migration: The Mexico–US Stream 1970–2000.” Population and Development Review 38(3): 393–433.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  77. Garip, Filiz. 2017. On the Move: Changing Mechanisms of Mexico‐U.S. Migration. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  78. Gereffi, Gary. 2009. “Development Models and Industrial Upgrading in China and Mexico.” European Sociological Review 25(1): 37–51.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  79. Gilman, Nils. 2003. Mandarins of the Future: Modernization Theory in Cold War America. Baltimore, MD: JHU Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  80. Goldman, Mara J, and Fernando Riosmena. 2013. “Adaptive Capacity in Tanzanian Maasailand: Changing Strategies to Cope with Drought in Fragmented Landscapes.” Global Environmental Change 23(3): 588‐597.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  81. Gómez‐Ullate, Martín, Laurent Rieutort, Afroditi Kamara, Ana Sofía Santos, Antonio Pirra, and Merly Gotay Solís. 2020. “Demographic Challenges in Rural Europe and Cases of Resilience Based on Cultural Heritage Management. A Comparative Analysis in Mediterranean Countries Inner Regions.” European Countryside 12(3): 408–431.

  82. Grasmuck, Sherri, and Patricia R. Pessar. 1991. Between Two Islands: Dominican International Migration. Berkeley: University of California Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  83. Hagan, Jacqueline Maria and Joshua Wassink. 2016. “New Skills, New Jobs: Return Migration, Skill Transfers, and Business Formation in Mexico.” Social Problems 63(4): 513–533.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  84. Hagan, Jacqueline Maria, and Joshua Thomas Wassink. 2020. “Return Migration around the World: An Integrated Agenda for Future Research.” Annual Review of Sociology 46: 533–552.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  85. Hagan, Jacqueline, Rubén Hernández‐León, and Jean‐Luc Demonsant. 2015. Skills of the Unskilled: Work and Mobility among Mexican Migrants. Berkeley: University of California Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  86. Hahamovitch, Cindy. 2013. No Man's Land: Jamaican Guestworkers in America and the Global History of Deportable Labor. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Hamilton, Erin R, Claudia Masferrer, and Nicole Denier. Unpublished. “Migrating for Family.”.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  87. Harper, Marjory, and Stephen Constantine. 2010. Migration and Empire. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  88. Harvey, Neil. 1998. The Chiapas Rebellion: The Struggle for Land and Democracy. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  89. Hatton, Timothy J, and Jeffrey G Williamson. 2005. Global Migration and the World Economy: Two Centuries of Policy and Performance. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  90. Heiland, Frank. 2004. “Trends in East‐West German Migration from 1989 to 2002.” Demographic Research 11: 173–194.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  91. Hernández‐León, Rubén, Efrén Sandoval Hernández, and Lidia Muñoz Paniagua. 2022. “Bringing Back the Bracero Program: The Migration Industry in the Recruitment of H‐2 Visa Workers.” In Race, Gender and Contemporary International Labor Migration Regimes: 21st Century Coolies, edited by Leticia Saucedo and Robyn Magalit Rodriguez, 35‐62. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  92. Hernández‐León, Rubén. 2021. “The Work That Brokers Do: The Skills, Competences and Know‐How of Intermediaries in the H‐2 Visa Programme.” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 47(10): 2341–2358.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  93. Hernández‐León, Rubén., and Victor Zúñiga. 2001. “A New Destination for an Old Migration: Origins, Trajectories, and Labor Market Incorporation of Latinos in Dalton, Georgia.” in Latino Workers in the Contemporary South, edited by A.D. Murphy, C. Blanchard, and J.A. Hill, pp. 126–135. Athens: University of Georgia Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  94. Hofmann, Erin Trouth, and Guangqing Chi. 2022. “Bride Kidnapping and Gendered Labor Migration: Evidence from Kyrgyzstan.” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 48(11): 2493–2514.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  95. Hollifield, James F, and Tom K Wong. 2022. “The Politics of International Migration.” In Migration Theory, edited by Caroline B. Brettell and James F. Hollifield, 269–305. London: Routledge.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  96. Hondagneu‐Sotelo, Pierrette. 1994. Gendered Transitions: The Mexican Experience of Immigration. Berkeley: University of California Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  97. Huang, Peng, and Carter T Butts. 2022. “Rooted America: Immobility and Segregation of the Inter‐County Migration Networks.” arXiv preprint arXiv:2205.02347.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  98. Hughes, Christina. 2019. “Reexamining the Influence of Conditional Cash Transfers on Migration from a Gendered Lens.” Demography 56(5): 1573–1605.

  99. Hughes, Christina. 2021. “Conditional Cash Transfers and Migration: Reconciling Feminist Theoretical Approaches with the New Economics of Labor Migration.” Demography 58(1): 383–391.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  100. Hunter, Lori M, and Daniel H Simon. 2022. “Time to Mainstream the Environment into Migration Theory?” International Migration Review 57(1): 5–35.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  101. IPCC, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. 2014. Climate Change 2014–Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability: Regional Aspects. New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  102. IPCC. 2021. The Physical Science Basis. Contribution of Working Group I to the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Edited by Masson‐Delmotte, V., P. Zhai, A. Pirani, S.L. Connors, C. Péan, S. Berger, N. Caud, Y. Chen, L. Goldfarb, M.I. Gomis, M. Huang, K. Leitzell, E. Lonnoy, J.B.R. Matthews, T.K. Maycock, T. Waterfield, O. Yelekçi, R. Yu, and B. Zhou. New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  103. Johnson, Kenneth M, and Daniel T Lichter. 2019. “Rural Depopulation: Growth and Decline Processes over the Past Century.” Rural Sociology 84(1): 3–27.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  104. Jonas, Susanne, and Nestor Rodríguez. 2015. Guatemala‐US Migration: Transforming Regions. Austin: University of Texas Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  105. Kale, Madhavi. 1998. Fragments of Empire: Capital, Slavery, and Indian Indentured Labor Migration in the British Caribbean. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  106. Kandel, William, and Emilio A. Parrado. 2005. “Restructuring of the Us Meat Processing Industry and New Hispanic Migrant Destinations.” Population and Development Review 31(3): 447–471.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  107. Kim, Jaeeun. 2018. “Migration‐Facilitating Capital: A Bourdieusian Theory of International Migration.” Sociological Theory 36(3): 262–288.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  108. King, Russell, and Ronald Skeldon. 2010. “‘Mind the Gap!’ Integrating Approaches to Internal and International Migration.” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 36(10): 1619–1646.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  109. Klien, Susanne. 2020. “Demographic Change in Contemporary Rural Japan and Its Impact on Ritual Practices.” Journal of Religion in Japan 9(1‐3): 248‐276.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  110. Kosack, Edward. 2021. “Guest Worker Programs and Human Capital Investment: The Bracero Program in Mexico, 1942–1964.” Journal of Human Resources 56(2): 570–599.

  111. Krissman, Fred. 2005. “Sin Coyote Ni Patron: Why the ”Migrant Network" Fails to Explain International Migration." International Migration Review 39(1): 4–44.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  112. Kwon, Roy. 2011. “How the Legacy of French Colonization Has Shaped Divergent Levels of Economic Development in East Asia: A Time‐Series Cross‐National Analysis.” The Sociological Quarterly 52(1): 56–82.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  113. Lawson, Victoria. 2014. Making Development Geography. London: Routledge.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  114. Le Espiritu, Yen. 1996. “Colonial Oppression, Labour Importation, and Group Formation: Filipinos in the United States.” Ethnic and Racial Studies 19(1): 29–48.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  115. Lee, E. 2003. At America's Gates: Chinese Immigration During the Exclusion Era, 1882–1943 Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  116. Lee, Erika. 2015. The Making of Asian America: A History. New York: Simon and Schuster.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  117. Leyk, Stefan, Dan Runfola, Raphael J Nawrotzki, Lori M Hunter, and Fernando Riosmena. 2017. “Internal and International Mobility as Adaptation to Climatic Variability in Contemporary Mexico: Evidence from the Integration of Census and Satellite Data.” Population, Space and Place 23(6): 1–15.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  118. Lindstrom, David P. 1996. “Economic Opportunity in Mexico and Return Migration from the United States.” Demography 33(3): 357–374.

  119. Lindstrom, David P., and Adriana López‐Ramírez. 2010. “Pioneers and Followers: Migrant Selectivity and the Development of U.S. Migration Streams in Latin America.” Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 630(1): 53–77.

  120. Lindstrom, David P., and Nathanael Lauster. 2001. “Local Economic Opportunity and the Competing Risks of Internal and U.S. Migration in Zacatecas, Mexico.” International Migration Review 35(4): 1232–1256.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  121. Loichinger, Elke. 2015. “Labor Force Projections up to 2053 for 26 EU Countries, by Age, Sex, and Highest Level of Educational Attainment.” Demographic Research 32: 443‐486.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  122. Loza, Mireya. 2022. “Let Them Bring Their Families: The Experiences of the First Mexican Guest Workers, 1917–1922.” Journal of American History 109(2): 310–323.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  123. Lozano‐Ascencio, F., B. R. Roberts, and Frank D. Bean. 1999. “The Interconnections of Internal and International Migration: The Case of the United States and Mexico.” In Migration and Transnational Social Spaces, edited by L. Pries. pp. 138–161. Aldershot: Ashgate.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  124. Luibhéid, Eithne. 2019. “Sexualities and International Migration.” In Routledge International Handbook of Migration Studies, pp. 224–235. London: Routledge.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  125. Lundquist, Jennifer H., and Douglas S. Massey. 2005. “Politics or Economics? International Migration During the Nicaraguan Contra War.” Journal of Latin American Studies 37: 29–53.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  126. Mabogunje, Akin L. 1970. “Systems Approach to a Theory of Rural‐Urban Migration.” Geographical Analysis 2(1): 1–18.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  127. Mahajan, Parag, and Dean Yang. 2020. “Taken by Storm: Hurricanes, Migrant Networks, and Us Immigration.” American Economic Journal: Applied Economics 12(2): 250–277.

  128. Malkki, Liisa H. 2012. Purity and Exile: Violence, Memory, and National Cosmology among Hutu Refugees in Tanzania. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  129. Mandić, D. 2022. “What is the Force of Forced Migration? Diagnosis and Critique of a Conceptual Relativization.” Theory and Society 51(1), 61–90.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  130. Marston, Jerome F., Jr. 2020. “Resisting Displacement: Leveraging Interpersonal Ties to Remain Despite Criminal Violence in Medellín, Colombia.” Comparative Political Studies 53(13): 1995–2028.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  131. Masferrer, Claudia, and Bryan R Roberts. 2016. “The Changing Patterns of Return Migration from the USA to Mexico and Their Policy Implications.” In Migration in an Era of Restriction and Recession, pp. 235–258. Cham: Springer.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  132. Massey, Douglas S, and Karen A Pren. 2012. “Unintended Consequences of Us Immigration Policy: Explaining the Post‐1965 Surge from Latin America.” Population and Development Review 38(1): 1‐29.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  133. Massey, Douglas S, J Arango, G Hugo, A Kouaouci, Adela Pellegrino, and Edward J Taylor. 1993. “Theories of International Migration: A Review and Appraisal.” Population and Development Review 19(3): 431–466.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  134. Massey, Douglas S, Jorge Durand, and Karen A Pren. 2015. “Border Enforcement and Return Migration by Documented and Undocumented Mexicans.” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 41(7): 1015–1040.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  135. Massey, Douglas S. 1988. “Economic Development and International Migration in Comparative Perspective.” Population and Development Review 14(3): 383‐413.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  136. Massey, Douglas S. 1990. “Social Structure, Household Strategies, and the Cumulative Causation of Migration.” Population Index 56(1): 3–26.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  137. Massey, Douglas S. 1999. “International Migration at the Dawn of the Twenty‐First Century: The Role of the State.” Population and Development Review 25(2): 303–322.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  138. Massey, Douglas S. 2012. “Towards an Integrated Model of International Migration.” Eastern Journal of European Studies 3(2): 9–35.

  139. Massey, Douglas S., and Fernando Riosmena. 2010. “Undocumented Migration from Latin America in an Era of Rising U.S. Enforcement.” The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 630(1): 294–321.

  140. Massey, Douglas S., Joaquin Arango, Graeme Hugo, Ali Kouaouci, Adela Pellegrino, and J. Edward Taylor. 1998. Worlds in Motion: Understanding International Migration at the End of the Millenium. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  141. Massey, Douglas S., Jorge Durand, and Nolan J. Malone. 2002. Beyond Smoke and Mirrors: Mexican Immigration in an Era of Economic Integration. New York: Russell Sage Foundation.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  142. Massey, Douglas S., Luin Goldring, and Jorge Durand. 1994. “Continuities in Transnational Migration: An Analysis of Nineteen Mexican Communities.” American Journal of Sociology 99(6): 1492–1533.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  143. McDonald‐Wilmsen, Brooke, and Michael Webber. 2010. “Dams and Displacement: Raising the Standards and Broadening the Research Agenda.” Water Alternatives 3(2): 142–161.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  144. McKeown, Adam. 2004. “Global Migration, 1846–1940.” Journal of World History: 155–189.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  145. Menjívar, Cecilia, and Leisy Abrego. 2012. “Legal Violence: Immigration Law and the Lives of Central American Immigrants.” American Journal of Sociology 117(5): 1380–1421.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  146. Menjívar, Cecilia. 2000. Fragmented Ties: Salvadoran Immigrant Networks in America. Berkeley: University of California Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  147. Menjívar, Cecilia. 2023. “State Categories, Bureaucracies of Displacement, and Possibilities from the Margins.” American Sociological Review 88(1): 1–23.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  148. Morawska, Ewa. 2007. “International Migration: Its Various Mechanisms and Different Theories That Try to Explain It.” Willy Brandt Series Working Papers 1/07.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  149. Morawska, Ewa. 2012. “Historical‐Structural Models of International Migration.” In An Introduction to International Migration Studies: European Perspectives, edited by Marco Martiniello and Jan Rath, 57–78. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  150. Morgan, Kimberly J, and Ann Shola Orloff. 2017. The Many Hands of the State: Theorizing Political Authority and Social Control. New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  151. Munshi, Kaivan. 2003. “Networks in the Modern Economy: Mexican Migrants in the US Labor Market.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 118(2): 549–599.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  152. Nawyn, Stephanie J. 2010. “Gender and Migration: Integrating Feminist Theory into Migration Studies.” Sociology Compass 4(9): 749–765.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  153. Nelson, Kyle Anne, and Christine Marston. 2020. “Refugee Migration Histories in a Meatpacking Town: Blurring the Line between Primary and Secondary Migration.” Journal of International Migration and Integration 21: 77–91.

  154. Ngai, Mae M. 2014. Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern America‐Updated Edition. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  155. O'Brien, Karen L, and Robin M Leichenko. 2000. “Double Exposure: Assessing the Impacts of Climate Change within the Context of Economic Globalization.” Global Environmental Change 10(3): 221–232.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  156. O'Malley, Gregory E. 2009. “Beyond the Middle Passage: Slave Migration from the Caribbean to North America, 1619–1807.” The William and Mary Quarterly 66(1): 125–172.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  157. O'Reilly, Karen. 2012. International Migration and Social Theory. New York: Macmillan International Higher Education.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  158. Oakes, Tim, and Louisa Schein. 2006. Translocal China: Linkages, Identities and the Reimagining of Space. London: Routledge.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  159. Pais, Jeremy. 2013. “The Effects of US Immigration on the Career Trajectories of Native Workers, 1979–2004.” American Journal of Sociology 119(1): 35–74.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  160. Park, Lisa Sun‐Hee, and David N. Pellow. 2011. The Slums of Aspen: Immigrants Vs. The Environment in America's Eden. New York: New York University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  161. Parreñas, Rhacel. 2020. Servants of Globalization. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  162. Paul, Anju Mary. 2011. “Stepwise International Migration: A Multistage Migration Pattern for the Aspiring Migrant.” American Journal of Sociology 116(6): 1842–1886.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  163. Peet, Richard, and Elaine Hartwick. 2015. Theories of Development: Contentions, Arguments, Alternatives. New York: Guilford Publications.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  164. Petras, Elizabeth McLean. 1981. “3: The Global Labor Market in the Modern World‐Economy.” International Migration Review 15(1_suppl): 44‐63.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  165. Piguet, Etienne. 2013. “From “Primitive Migration” to “Climate Refugees”: The Curious Fate of the Natural Environment in Migration Studies.” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 103(1):148‐162.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  166. Piguet, Etienne. 2018. “Theories of Voluntary and Forced Migration.” In Routledge Handbook of Environmental Displacement and Migration, pp. 17–28. London: Routledge.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  167. Piore, Michael J. 1979. Birds of Passage: Migrant Labor and Industrial Societies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  168. Poole, Alicia. 2022. “Migration as Conflict Risk‐Management: Testing the New Economics of Labour Migration as a Framework for Understanding Refugee Decision‐Making.” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 48(15): 3725–3742.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  169. Portes, Alejandro, and Patricia Landolt. 2000. “Social Capital: Promise and Pitfalls of Its Role in Development.” Journal of Latin American Studies 32(2): 529‐547.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  170. Portes, Alejandro. 1998. “Social Capital: Its Origins and Applications in Modern Sociology.” Annual Review of Sociology 24(1): 1–24.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  171. Portes, Alejandro. 2010. “Migration and Social Change: Some Conceptual Reflections.” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 36(10): 1537–1563.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  172. Quiñones, Esteban J, Jenna Nobles, Fernando Riosmena, and Raphael Nawrotzki. 2023. “Anticipatory Migration Responses to Rural Climate Shocks.” AEA Papers and Proceedings 113: 367–371.

  173. Rai, Pronoy. 2020. “Seasonal Masculinities: Seasonal Labor Migration and Masculinities in Rural Western India.” Gender, Place & Culture 27(2): 261‐280.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  174. Randell, Heather. 2018. “The Strength of Near and Distant Ties: Social Capital, Environmental Change, and Migration in the Brazilian Amazon.” Sociology of Development 4(4): 394–416.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  175. Riosmena, Fernando, and Mao‐Mei Liu. 2019. “Who Goes Next? The Gendered Expansion of Mexican and Senegalese Migrant Sibling Networks in Space and Time.” The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science(684): 146–164.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  176. Riosmena, Fernando, Raphael Nawrotzki, and Lori Hunter. 2018. “Climate Migration at the Height and End of the Great Mexican Emigration Era.” Population and Development Review 44(3): 455–488.

  177. Riosmena, Fernando. 2016. “The Potential and Limitations of Cross‐Context Comparative Research on Migration.” The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 666(1): 28–45.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  178. Riosmena, Fernando. 2022. “Environmental Change, Its Social Impacts, and Migration Responses within and out of Latin America: A Review and Theoretical Inquiry.” In The Routledge History of Modern Latin American Migration, edited by A.E. Feldman, J. Durand, S. Schütze, and X. Bada, 385399. New York: Routledge.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  179. Rotte, Ralph, and Peter Stein. 2002. Migration Policy and the Economy: International Experiences: H. Seidel Stiftung. Berlin: Akademie für Politik und Zeitgeschehen.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  180. Sasse, Gwendolyn. 2020. “War and Displacement: The Case of Ukraine.” Europe‐Asia Studies, 72(3): 347–353.

  181. Sassen, Saskia. 1988. The Mobility of Labor and Capital: A Study in International Investment and Labor Flow. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  182. Sassen, Saskia. 1991. The Global City. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  183. Schewel, Kerilyn. 2019. “Understanding Immobility: Moving Beyond the Mobility Bias in Migration Studies.” International Migration Review: 54(2):328‐355.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  184. Shah, Nasra M. 2004. “Gender and Labour Migration to the Gulf Countries.” Feminist Review 77(1): 183–185.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  185. Shams, Tahseen. 2020. Here, There, and Elsewhere: The Making of Immigrant Identities in a Globalized World. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  186. Skeldon, Ronald. 2014. Migration and Development: A Global Perspective. London: Routledge.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  187. Smith, Lothar, and Valentina Mazzucato. 2009. “Constructing Homes, Building Relationships: Migrant Investments in Houses.” Tijdschrift voor economische en sociale geografie 100(5): 662‐673.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  188. Snyder, Benjamin H. 2016. The Disrupted Workplace: Time and the Moral Order of Flexible Capitalism. New York: Oxford University Press.

  189. Sparke, Matthew. 2013. Introducing Globalization: Ties, Tensions, and Uneven Integration. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  190. Sreenivas, Mytheli. 2021. Reproductive Politics and the Making of Modern India. Seattle: University of Washington Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  191. Stephen, Lynn. 2007. Transborder Lives: Indigenous Oaxacans in Mexico, California, and Oregon: Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  192. Szreter, Simon. 1997. “Economic Growth, Disruption, Deprivation, Disease, and Death: On the Importance of the Politics of Public Health for Development.” Population and Development Review 23(4): 693‐728.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  193. Thai, Hung Cam. 2014. Insufficient Funds: The Culture of Money in Low‐Wage Transnational Families. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  194. Tsuda, Takeyuki. 2003. Strangers in the Ethnic Homeland: Japanese Brazilian Return Migration in Transnational Perspective. New York: Columbia University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  195. Van Natta, Meredith. 2023. Medical Legal Violence: Health Care and Immigration Enforcement against Latinx Noncitizens. New York: NYU Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  196. Van Praag, Lore, and Christiane Timmerman. 2019. “Environmental Migration and Displacement: A New Theoretical Framework for the Study of Migration Aspirations in Response to Environmental Changes.” Environmental Sociology 5(4): 352–361.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  197. Villarreal, Andrés. 2014. “Explaining the Decline in Mexico‐Us Migration: The Effect of the Great Recession.” Demography 51(6): 2203–2228.

  198. Waldinger, Roger, and Tahseen Shams. 2023. “Cross‐Border Politics: Diasporic Mobilization and State Response.” Annual Review of Sociology 49: 401–409.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  199. Wassink, Joshua, and Douglas S Massey. 2022. “The New System of Mexican Migration: The Role of Entry Mode–Specific Human and Social Capital.” Demography 59(3): 1071–1092.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  200. Woldoff, Rachael A, and Robert C Litchfield. 2021. Digital Nomads: In Search of Freedom, Community, and Meaningful Work in the New Economy. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  201. Wyman, Mark. 1996. Round‐Trip to America: The Immigrants Return to Europe, 1880–1930. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  202. Wyrod, Robert. 2019. “In the General's Valley: China, Africa, and the Limits of Developmental Pragmatism.” Sociology of Development 5(2): 174‐197.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  203. Yang, Dean. 2006. “Why Do Migrants Return to Poor Countries? Evidence from Philippine Migrants' Responses to Exchange Rate Shocks.” The Review of Economics and Statistics 88(4): 715–735.

  204. Yang, Dean. 2008. “International Migration, Remittances and Household Investment: Evidence from Philippine Migrants' Exchange Rate Shocks.” The Economic Journal 118(528): 591–630.

  205. Yu, Kyoung‐Hee, and Frank Levy. 2010. “Offshoring Professional Services: Institutions and Professional Control.” British Journal of Industrial Relations 48(4): 758–783.

  206. Zenteno, René. 2023. “The Silent Nonmigrant Population: Understanding Immobility in Mexico.” Paper presented at the 2023 TEXPOP conference, University of Texas ‐ Austin.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  207. Zickgraf, Caroline. 2021. “Theorizing (Im) Mobility in the Face of Environmental Change.” Regional Environmental Change 21(4): 126.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  208. Zolberg, Aristide R. 1983. “The Formation of New States as a Refugee‐Generating Process.” The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 467(1): 24–38.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  209. Zolberg, Aristide R. 1999. “Matters of State: Theorizing Immigration Policy.” In The Handbook of International Migration: The American Experience, edited by C. Hirschman, P. Kasinitz, and J. DeWind, 71–93. New York: Russell Sage Foundation.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  210. Zolberg, Aristide R. 2009. A Nation by Design: Immigration Policy in the Fashioning of America. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now

Cocites

Documents in RePEc which have cited the same bibliography

  1. The Fatal Consequences of Brain Drain. (2025). Dodini, Samuel ; Willn, Alexander ; Loken, Katrine Vellesen ; Lundborg, Petter.
    In: IZA Discussion Papers.
    RePEc:iza:izadps:dp17819.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  2. The Fatal Consequences of Brain Drain. (2025). Løken, Katrine ; Dodini, Samuel ; Willn, Alexander ; Lundborg, Petter ; Lken, Katrine.
    In: Discussion Paper Series in Economics.
    RePEc:hhs:nhheco:2025_009.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  3. What matters for the decision to study abroad? A lab-in-the-field experiment in Cape Verde. (2025). Reis, Ana ; Batista, Catia ; Freitas, Pedro ; Costa, David M ; Lima, Gonalo.
    In: Journal of Development Economics.
    RePEc:eee:deveco:v:173:y:2025:i:c:s0304387824001500.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  4. International mobility as a development strategy. (2024). Bank, World.
    In: World Bank Publications - Reports.
    RePEc:wbk:wboper:41928.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  5. What matters for the decision to study abroad? A lab-in-the-field experiment in Cape Verde. (2024). Reis, Ana ; Batista, Catia ; Lima, Goncalo ; Freitas, Pedro ; Costa, David M.
    In: Nova SBE Working Paper Series.
    RePEc:unl:unlfep:wp660.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  6. What Matters for the Decision to Study Abroad? A Lab-in-the-Field Experiment in Cape Verde. (2024). Batista, Catia ; Reis, Ana Balcao ; Lima, Goncalo ; Freitas, Pedro ; Costa, David M.
    In: NOVAFRICA Working Paper Series.
    RePEc:unl:novafr:wp2401.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  7. Education Research and Policy: A Commentary on Jabbar and Menashy€™s €œEconomic Imperialism in Education Research: A Conceptual Review€. (2024). Affognon, Don A.
    In: Journal of Educational Issues.
    RePEc:mth:jeijnl:v:10:y:2024:i:2:p:117.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  8. What Matters for the Decision to Study Abroad? A Lab-in-the-Field Experiment in Cape Verde. (2024). Reis, Ana ; Batista, Catia ; Freitas, Pedro ; Lima, Gonalo ; Costa, David M.
    In: IZA Discussion Papers.
    RePEc:iza:izadps:dp17096.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  9. Laying off old guards to rebuild state capacity: Deng Xiaoping’s bloodless coup d’etat in post-Mao China, 1980-2000. (2024). Guo, Jingyuan ; Deng, Kent.
    In: Economic History Working Papers.
    RePEc:ehl:wpaper:126083.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  10. Laying off old guards to rebuild state capacity: Deng Xiaoping’s bloodless coup d’etat in post-Mao China, 1980-2000. (2024). Guo, Jingyuan ; Deng, Kent.
    In: LSE Research Online Documents on Economics.
    RePEc:ehl:lserod:126083.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  11. Worlds in Motion Redux? Expanding Migration Theories and Their Interconnections. (2024). Riosmena, Fernando.
    In: Population and Development Review.
    RePEc:bla:popdev:v:50:y:2024:i:3:p:677-726.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  12. The political economy of remittances:the case of Sub-Saharan Africa. (2023). Kiss, Judit.
    In: IWE Working Papers.
    RePEc:iwe:workpr:270.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  13. A Critical Examination of Rural Out-Migration Studies in Ethiopia: Considering Impacts on Agriculture in the Sending Communities. (2023). Dessalegn, Mengistu ; Debevec, Liza ; Ludi, Eva ; Nicol, Alan.
    In: Land.
    RePEc:gam:jlands:v:12:y:2023:i:1:p:176-:d:1025905.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  14. Socioeconomic Determinants of Migration in the City of Lahore, Pakistan. (2022). Ghafoor, Naghmana ; Akbar, Muhammad Riaz ; Mehr-un-Nisa, .
    In: Journal of the Knowledge Economy.
    RePEc:spr:jknowl:v:13:y:2022:i:4:d:10.1007_s13132-021-00844-4.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  15. Cross Border Migration as a Poverty Alleviation Strategy; a Comparative Study between Immigrants from Zimbabwe to South Africa and Mexico to United States of America. (2022). Malatji, Thabiso Lucky.
    In: Eurasian Journal of Social Sciences.
    RePEc:ejn:ejssjr:v:10:y:2022:i:4:p:226-235.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  16. Migration and Climate Change Impacts on Rural Entrepreneurs in Nigeria: A Gender Perspective. (2021). Abiola, Catherine.
    In: Sustainability.
    RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:13:y:2021:i:16:p:8882-:d:610867.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  17. Multilevel research of migration with a focus on internal migration. (2021). Hejdukova, Pavlina ; Kurekova, Lucie.
    In: International Journal of Economic Sciences.
    RePEc:aop:jijoes:v:10:y:2021:i:2:p:87-103.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  18. Multilevel research of migration with a focus on internal migration. (2021). Hejdukova, Pavlina ; Kurekova, Lucie.
    In: International Journal of Economic Sciences.
    RePEc:aop:jijoes:v:10:y:2021:i:2:p:86-102.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  19. Trapped or Voluntary? Non-Migration Despite Climate Risks. (2020). Schanze, Jochen ; Mallick, Bishawjit.
    In: Sustainability.
    RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:12:y:2020:i:11:p:4718-:d:369241.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  20. Impact of International Remittances on Poverty in Bangladesh: Evidence from the Household Data. (2019). Rahman, Rezwana ; Moni, Nurun Naher.
    In: Remittances Review.
    RePEc:mig:remrev:v:4:y:2019:i:1:p:41-66.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  21. The contribution of J.R. Commons to migration analysis. (2018). Obeng-Odoom, Franklin.
    In: Evolutionary and Institutional Economics Review.
    RePEc:spr:eaiere:v:15:y:2018:i:1:d:10.1007_s40844-017-0089-y.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  22. Do remittances supplement South Asian development?. (2017). Ullah, Ahsan.
    In: Remittances Review.
    RePEc:mig:remrev:v:2:y:2017:i:1:p:31-45.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  23. Urban Governance in Africa Today: Reframing, Experiences, and Lessons. (2017). Obeng-Odoom, Franklin.
    In: Growth and Change.
    RePEc:bla:growch:v:48:y:2017:i:1:p:4-21.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  24. Determinants of rural out-migration in Ethiopia: Who stays and who goes?. (2016). Penker, Marianne ; Tegegne, Atsede Desta .
    In: Demographic Research.
    RePEc:dem:demres:v:35:y:2016:i:34.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  25. Shrinking Regions in a Shrinking Country: The Geography of Population Decline in Lithuania 2001-2011. (2014). van Ham, Maarten ; Burneika, Donatas.
    In: IZA Discussion Papers.
    RePEc:iza:izadps:dp8026.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  26. TOWARD MIGRATION TRANSITION IN ROMANIA. (2012). Incaltarau, Cristian.
    In: CES Working Papers.
    RePEc:jes:wpaper:y:2012:v:4:p:726-735.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  27. TOWARD MIGRATION TRANSITION IN ROMANIA. (2012). Incaltarau, Cristian.
    In: CES Working Papers.
    RePEc:jes:wpaper:y:2012:v:4:i:4:p:726-735.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  28. The impact of remittances on consumption and investment in Romania. (2012). MAHA, Liviu-George ; Incaltarau, Cristian ; iNCALRU, Cristian .
    In: Eastern Journal of European Studies.
    RePEc:jes:journl:y:2012:v:3:p:61-86.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  29. A Broader Look on Migration: A Two Way Interaction Between Development and Migration in the Country Of Origin. (2011). MAHA, Liviu-George ; Incaltarau, Cristian.
    In: Review of Economic and Business Studies.
    RePEc:aic:revebs:y:2011:i:8:incaltarauc.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  30. Frustrating the frustrated: Analysis of the plights of African Migrants seekers in uMhlathuze area of Kwazulu-Natal Province, South Africa. (0000). Adetiba, Toyin Cotties.
    In: Proceedings of International Academic Conferences.
    RePEc:sek:iacpro:14616283.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

Coauthors

Authors registered in RePEc who have wrote about the same topic

Report date: 2025-09-23 18:55:18 || Missing content? Let us know

CitEc is a RePEc service, providing citation data for Economics since 2001. Last updated August, 3 2024. Contact: Jose Manuel Barrueco.