Search results for "Circular migration"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Human capital and life satisfaction among circular migrants: an analysis of extended mobility in Europe

2019

This article extends understandings of circular migration among young migrants (aged 16–35) by focusing on the two key concepts of human capital and life satisfaction. Drawing on a large-scale quan...

Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Circular migration05 social sciences050602 political science & public administration0507 social and economic geographyKey (cryptography)Life satisfactionDemographic economicsSociology050703 geographyHuman capital0506 political scienceDemographyJournal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
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Rhythmic Island: Latvian Migrants in Guernsey and their Enfolded Patterns of Space-Time Mobility

2015

Rather than a marginal activity, visiting friends and relatives (VFR) is a fundamental part of the migrant experience. We illustrate this assertion by an in-depth study of Latvian labour migration to Guernsey. Since the 1990s, low incomes and high unemployment in post-Soviet Latvia combine with niche-specific labour demands in Guernsey to create migratory flows of mainly female workers. The small-scale nature of this circular migration system allows a deeper theorisation of the many linkages between migration and VFR. In particular we deploy time-geography and rhythmanalysis to explore the various ways that migration and VFR are enfolded within each other, within the life-courses of the pro…

Visiting friends and relativesMobilitiesGeography Planning and DevelopmentLatvianTime geographylanguage.human_languageHigh unemploymentCircular migrationEconomyPolitical sciencelanguageDemographic economicsEmpirical evidenceDemographyPopulation, Space and Place
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Circularity Within the EU: The Return Intentions of Latvian Migrants

2016

Recently, much attention has been paid in the literature to circular migration because of its perceived potential to reduce permanent migration and to promote development. This is probably a result of a perfect combination of interests benefiting not only sending and receiving countries, but also the migrants themselves (Vertovec 2007; Adepoju et al. 2010; Castles and Ozkul 2014). Circularity allows migrants to gain experience and acquire skills, and to apply them on returning to their countries of origin, thereby contributing to development (Cassarino 2004; de Haas 2010, 2012), transforming brain drain into brain gain, and at the same time contributing to their positive effects on labour m…

Economic sector05 social sciences0507 social and economic geographyLatvianDiversification (marketing strategy)language.human_language0506 political scienceEastern europeanPoliticsCircular migrationPolitical science050602 political science & public administrationlanguagemedia_common.cataloged_instanceTransnationalismDemographic economicsEuropean union050703 geographymedia_common
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