Notice bibliographique
- Notice
Type(s) de contenu et mode(s) de consultation : Texte noté : électronique
Titre(s) : Global migration [Texte électronique] : old assumptions, new dynamics / Diego Acosta Arcarazo and Anja Wiesbrock, editors
Publication : Santa Barbara, California : Praeger, [2015]
Description matérielle : 1 ressource dématérialisée
Autre(s) auteur(s) : Acosta Arcarazo, Diego (1980-....). Éditeur scientifique
Wiesbrock, Anja. Éditeur scientifique
Sujet(s) : Émigration et immigration
Identifiants, prix et caractéristiques : ISBN 9781440804236
Identifiant de la notice : ark:/12148/cb450956168
Notice n° :
FRBNF45095616
(notice reprise d'un réservoir extérieur)
Table des matières : Volume 1. Chapter One: Global Migration Issues: Myths and Realities; Part I -- Myth:
Developed countries are being swamped by migrants -- Chapter Two: Migration Is Historically
Normal: Europe as Source and Destination of Global Population Movements -- Chapter
Three: Why Do People Migrate? A Review of the Theoretical Economic Literature -- Chapter
Four: Borders as Floodgates: Contesting the Myth from Federal and Regional International
Experiences in Light of EU Free Movement -- Part II -- Myth: Migration only takes
place from developing to developed countries and serves as an escape from poverty
-- Chapter Five: Ten Myths about Migration and Development: Revelations Involving
the Mexico-United States Experience -- Chapter Six: Migration to the Gulf States:
The Political Economy of Exceptionalism -- Chapter Seven: "Almost a Brazilian": Gringos,
Immigration, and Irregularity in Brazil -- Part III -- Myth: Migration is economically
negative -- Chapter Eight: Is Immigration Positive for the Welfare State? The Case
of Spain -- Chapter Nine: Labor Migration from India to Italy: Debunking the Myth
of the Undesirable Low-Skilled Migrant in the European Union -- Chapter Ten: The Myth
of Benefit Tourists and Welfare Magnets: A Relationship between Social Welfare and
Free Movement in the European Union?
Volume 2. Part I -- Myth: Restrictive migration policies are effective -- Chapter
One: Militarization of the Mexico-U.S. Border and Its Effects on the Circularity of
Migrants -- Chapter Two: Out of Sight, Out of Mind?: The Myths and Realities of Mandatory
Immigration Detention -- Chapter Three: The Quest for Turkish Migration to the European
Union: Exploring the Misconceptions -- Part II -- Myth: Restrictive policies toward
migrants are inevitable -- Chapter Four: Regularization in the European Union and
the United States: The Frequent Use of an Exceptional Measure -- Chapter Five: National
Voting Rights for Permanent Residents: New Zealand's Experience -- Chapter Six: Improving
Migrants' Rights in Times of Crisis: Migration Policy in Argentina since 2003 -- Part
III -- Myth: Restrictive immigration policies promote integration -- Chapter Seven:
Mevrouw De Jong Gaat Eten: Naturalization Biases Tested in Practice -- Chapter Eight:
Family Reunion as a Means of Integration: Has It Failed or Succeeded? -- Chapter Nine:
The Mythical Death of Multiculturalism.
Volume 3. Part I: Myth: Migrant workers cannot get equal rights -- Chapter One – Straight
Talk about the Dynamics of Labor Migration -- Chapter Two – Revisiting the Myth of
Guest Worker Programs: The Case of Malaysia -- Part II: Myth: Migrants are a threat
to society -- Chapter Three – False Narratives in the Migration Debate: Playing Games
with Immigrants' Lives in Greece -- Chapter Four – Migration Myths and Extreme Xenophobia
in South Africa -- Chapter Five – International Migration and Immigrant Settlement
in the United States -- Part III: Myth: Migration always harms the prospects of developing
countries by causing a brain drain -- Chapter Six – High-Skilled Migration: A New
Way Forward for Europe, the United States, and the World -- Chapter Seven – Promoting
Circular International Migration of the Highly Skilled -- Chapter Eight – Student
Migration from India: Implications for the Origin and the Host Countries -- Chapter
Nine – Changing Dynamics of Remittance Flows and Their Impact on the Economy: The
Case of Pakistan.