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This book provides a collection of key papers about migration, focusing on multiple aspects of international and internal migration in various times and places. Because migration has been such an important part of global peopling, the book contains synopses of major geographic movements from ancient and early history as well as the present. It includes material from anthropology, archaeology, criminology, demography, economics, ethnic studies, geography, health sciences, history, law, public policy, political science, psychology, and sociology. By providing a treatment of migration that is multifaceted, comparative, and multi-disciplinary, it offers not only a basis for conceptualizing broad features of migration and their changes, but also one for discerning the formal and informal policy auspices that have influenced migration. The book thus constitutes a significant resource for students, teachers, practitioners, scholars, and researchers interested in or working on aspectsof migration in any field. It should be particularly useful for people seeking information and knowledge about migration from fields other than their own.
Encompasses different aspects of migration Covers multiple disciplinary perspectives and parts of the world Provides a global perspective on the field of Migration Studies
Autorentext
Dr. Bean is a social scientist with 35 years of experience as a researcher, teacher, administrator and public policy analyst. His PhD is in sociology and his dissertation was written in social psychology. As a graduate student at Duke University, in addition to his work in sociology and social psychology (with Alan C. Kerckhoff, Kurt Back and Edward E. Jones), he took courses in demography and worked on research projects for three distinguished demographers (Reynolds Farley, Nathan Keyfitz and Hal Winsborough), all of whom subsequently became foundational leaders in population studies at prestigious universities in the United States (Michigan, Harvard and Wisconsin respectively). As the founding Director of both the Population Studies Center and the Immigration Policy Research Center at The Urban Institute in Washington, DC, Dr. Bean has also conducted work in and developed extensive knowledge about the economics of population and migration. He is currently Chancellor's Professor of Sociology and Economics at the University of California, Irvine.
Dr. Brown is a tenured Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Irvine. She is a sociologist/demographer whose areas of specialization are immigration, residential segregation and urban sociology. As a result of conducting research in these areas, she has also developed considerable expertise in geography and urban policy. In addition to her academic and research specializations, she also brings more than fifteen years of journalistic experience as a reporter and editor starting when she was on the staff of the Harvard Crimson and including nearly twelve years with the St. Louis-Post Dispatch.
Inhalt
Africa: 1. African Island Migration: I. Walker.- 2. Southern African Migration: E. Campbell.- 3. Trans-Saharan Slave Trade: M. Kehinde.- 4. Western African Migration: P. Adebusoye.- Asylees: 5: Asylum and Human Rights: T. Southerden.- 6: Asylum and Language Analysis: P. Patrick.- 7: Gender and Asylum: A. Shuman, C. Bohmer.- 8: Medical and Psychological Evidence of Trauma in Asylum Cases: S. Berthold.- 9: Refugee Roulette: J. Ramji-Nogales, P. Schrag, A. Schoenholtz.- 10: Relationship Between Asylum and Trafficking: J. Gauci.- 11: Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity, and Asylum: R. Lewis.- Contexts of Migration: 12: Changing Contexts: From Multiculturalism to Transnationalism? S. Castles.- 13: Citizenship in the Context of Immigration Comparative Perspectives: T. Faist, K. Schmidt-Verkerk, C. Ulbricht.- 14: Group-specific Effects of Contexts of Migration: S. Model.- 15: Migration, Diversity, and the Welfare State: K. Banting.- 16: Role of Contexts and Political Culture in Political Incorporation: A Case Study of Chilean Migration to Toronto: P. Landolt.- Human Trafficking: 17: Child Trafficking: W. Adelson.- 18: Human Trafficking: F. Sarrica.- 19: Human Trafficking Policy Responses: K. Sreeharsha.- 20: Labor Trafficking: M. Barnhart.- 21: Migration Industries, Legal Services, and Human Smuggling: D. Kyle.- 22: Sex Trafficking: G. Chang.- Internal Migration: Shorter Distance: 23: Gentrification: J. Brueckner.- 24: Intrametropolitan Population Distribution: L.Quillian.- 25: Local Mobility: W. Clark.- 26: Migration-Defining Boundary: M. White.- 27: Place Utility: D. López-Carr, D. Phillips.- Labor Market Context of Immigrant Reception: 28: Labor Migration Policies: A Typology: H. Kolb.- 29: Labor-Market Shifts and Immigration: J. Gagnon.- 30: Trade Unions, Immigration, and Migrant Workers: J.Roosblad, S. Maroni, R. Penninx.- Legalization and Citizenship of Immigrants: 31: Dual/Multiple Citizenship: S. Wallace Goodman,-32: Naturalization: S. Wallace Goodman.- Measurements of Internal and International Migration: 33: Age, Period, and Cohort Effects: C. Altman.- 34: Dual-System Estimation: P.Cantwell.- 35: Duration of Residence Measurement: I. Redstone Akresh, D. Massey.- 36: Ethnographic Analysis: D. Fitzgerald.- 37: Indirect Methods for Estimating Internal Migration: R. Winkler, K. Curtis.- 38: Measuring Internal Migration Prospectively Using Longitudinal Data: R. Olsen, E. Cooksey.- 39: Measuring Internal Migration: Retrospective Self-Report: M. Hall.- 40: Methods for Estimating International Migration: M. Scopilliti, K. West, J. Devine.- 41: Using Registration Data to Measure International and Internal Migration in the European Union: S. Makaryan.- Oceania: 42: Gold Rushes (Australia): J. Jupp.- 43: Pacific Island Countries and Migration: C. Voigt-Graf.- Permanence of Migration: 44: Points-Based Immigration: M. Sumption.- 45:Temporary Labor Migration: C. Foulkes.- Populationand Migration: 46: Fertility of Immigrants: S. Dubuc.- Refugees: 47: Forced Migration: Global Trends and Explanations: J. Hein, T. Niazi.- 48: Refugee Integration: Issues and Challenges: T. Majka, L. Majka.- 49: Refugee Mental Health: Child and Adolescent Refugees: E. Rothe, A. Pumariega, H. Castillo-Matos.- 50: Refugees Defined: P. Rose.- Settlement and Integration Policies: 51: Cultural Diversity: The Australian Social Cohesion Surveys: A. Markus.- 52: Jewish Diaspora: S. Rutland.- 53: White Australia Policy: G.Tavan.- Skill Level of Migrants: 54: High-Skilled Migration: R. Iredale.- 55: Labor Migration: M. Sinning, M. Tani.-56: Reservation Wages and Immigrants: M. Sinning.