Migration, (5 Volume Set)

Title: Migration, (5 Volume Set)
Author: Steven Vertovec
ISBN: 0415478421 / 9780415478427
Format: Hard Cover
Pages: 1968
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2009
Availability: 45-60 days

Tab Article

Nowadays, migration seems never far from the top of the political agenda. Whether as a consequence of civil and ethnic unrest, or as one response to the widening gulf between the wealthy and poor zones of the world, international population movement for sanctuary or settlement has become as prevalent as increased capital flows. (Indeed, for many commentators, there is a clear connection between the fluidity of population movements and the economic and technological changes that have generated ‘globalization’.)

According to UN estimates, the global stock of migrants has doubled in the past forty years and now amounts to around 200 million souls living outside their places of birth. For receiving countries, migration—at once perceived as a social challenge and an economic necessity—prompts difficult debates and questions.

Perhaps rather belatedly, the social sciences have recognized the importance of these issues and a significant body of new literature has accumulated in recent decades. The field is, however, intrinsically multidisciplinary with contributions stemming from economics, demography, human geography, law, sociology, political science, and social anthropology. Migration also interweaves with other important multidisciplinary fields such as gender studies, labour-market studies, and cultural studies.

The sheer scale of the growth in migration research output – and the breadth and complexity of the discipline – makes this new Major Work from Routledge especially timely, and answers the urgent need for a wide-ranging collection which provides easy access to the key items of scholarly literature, material that is often inaccessible or scattered throughout a variety of specialist journals and books. In five volumes, Migration brings together the best and most influential foundational and cutting-edge research on: theories of migration; patterns of migration; the politics of migration; and the dynamics of migration.

The collection is supplemented with a full index, and includes a comprehensive introduction, newly written by the editor, which places the collected material in its historical and intellectual context. Migration is destined to be valued by scholars, students, and researchers as a vital research resource.

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Volume I : Theories

Part 1 : Theories
Chapter 1 : Push-Pull Migration Laws’, Annals of The Association of American Geographers, 1983
Chapter 2 : Contemporary Immigration: Theoretical Perspectives on its Determinants and Modes of Incorporation’, International Migration Review, 1989
Chapter 3 : Theories of International Migration: A Review and Appraisal’, Population and Development Review, 1993
Chapter 4 : Explaining Migration: A Critical View’, International Social Science Journal, 2000
Chapter 5 : Sociology and The Study of Immigration’, American Behavioral Scientist, 1999

Part 2 : Concepts

Chapter 6 : Migration Networks and The Shaping of Migration Systems, International Migration Systems: A Global Approach
Chapter 7 : The Crucial Meso-Level, International Migration Immobility and Development: Multidisciplinary Perspectives
Chapter 8 : Methodological Nationalism, The Social Sciences and The Study of Migration’, International Migration Review, 2003

Part 3 : Flows
Chapter 9 : European Migration from East to West: Present Patterns and Future Directions’, New Community, 1996
Chapter 10 : Issues and Recent Trends in International Migration in Sub-Saharan Africa’, International Social Science Journal, 2000
Chapter 11 : Towards a Diversity of Migratory Types and Contexts in SouThern Europe’, Studi Emigrazione, 2002
Chapter 12 : Arab Migration to Europe: Trends and Policies’, International Migration Review, 2004
Chapter 13 : Recent Trends in International Migration in Asia and The Pacific’, Asia-Pacific Population Journal, 2005

Part 4 : Shifts
Chapter 14 : The Next Waves: Migration Theory for a Changing World’, International Migration Review, 1989
Chapter 15 : Immigration Theory for a New Century: Some Problems and Opportunities’, International Migration Review, 1997
Chapter 16 : Globalization and Migration: Some Pressing Contradictions’, International Social Science Journal, 1998
Chapter 17 : Twenty-First Century Migration as a Challenge to Sociology’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 2007

Volume II: Types


Part 5 : Labour Migrants

Chapter 18 : The Function of Labour Immigration in Western European Capitalism’, New Left Review, 1972
Chapter 19 : Immigrant Workers and Class Struggles in Advanced Capitalism: The West European Experience’, Politics and Society, 1975
Chapter 20 : International Labor Migration of Asian Women: Distinctive Characteristics and Policy Concerns’, Asian and Pacific Migration Journal, 1996
Chapter 21 : Guest Worker Policies for The Twenty-First Century’, New Community, 1997
Chapter 22 : Guestworkers in Europe: A Resurrection?’, International Migration Review, 2006
Chapter 23 : The Geography of Highly Skilled International Migration’, International Journal of Population Geography, 1997

Part 6 : Refugees
Chapter 24 : Who is a Refugee?’, Ethics, 1985
Chapter 25 : The Geo-Politics of Refugee Studies: A View from The South’, Journal of Refugee Studies, 1998
Chapter 26 : Fifty Years of Refugee Studies: From Theory to Policy’, International Migration Review, 2001
Chapter 27 : Liberal Democratic States and Responsibilities to Refugees’, American Political Science Review, 1999

Part 7 : Miscellaneous Types
Chapter 28 :
A Comparative Overview of International Trends and Types’, International Migration Review, 1989
Chapter 29 : Theorising Return Migration: The Conceptual Approach to Return Migrants Revisited’, International Journal on Multicultural Societies, 2004
Chapter 30 : Irregular Migration: A Global Historical and Economic Perspective’, Illegal Immigration in Europe
Chapter 31 : International Opportunities: Searching for The Meaning of Student Migration’, Geographica Helvetica, 2005
Chapter 32 : Tourism and International Retirement Migration: New Forms of an Old Relationship in SouThern Europe’, Tourism Geographies, 2000
Chapter 33 : Environmental Refugees: Myth or Reality?
Chapter 34 : Ethnic German Migration Since 1989: Results and Perspectives’ (1999)

Volume III: Trends

Part 8 : Modes of Migration

Chapter 35 : A Continent of Migration: European Mass Migration in The Twentieth Century’, New Community, 1996
Chapter 36 : Female "Birds of Passage" a Decade Later: Gender and Immigration in The European Union’, International Migration Review, 1999
Chapter 37 : Migration as a Business: The Case of Trafficking’, International Migration, 1997
Chapter 38 : Crossing The Fringes of Europe: Transit Migration in The EU’s Neighbourhood’, COMPAS Working Paper

Part 9 : Migration and Development
Chapter 39 : Migration and Development: A Critical Relationship’, Asian and Pacific Migration Journal, 1992
Chapter 40 : Migradollars and Development: A Reconsideration of The Mexican Case’, International Migration Review, 1996
Chapter 41 : Social Remittances: Migration Driven Local-Level Forms of Cultural Diffusion’, International Migration Review, 1998
Chapter 42 : The Migration-Development Nexus: Evidence and Policy Options’, International Migration, 2002

Part 10 : Transnationalism

Chapter 43 : What’s New about Transnationalism? New York Immigrants Today and at The Turn of The Century’, Diaspora, 1997
Chapter 44 : The Study of Transnationalism: Pitfalls and Promise of an Emergent Research Field’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 1999
Chapter 45 : Transnational Migration: Bringing Gender in’, International Migration Review, 2003
Chapter 46 : Immigrant Incorporation and Socio Cultural Transnationalism’, International Migration Review, 2002
Chapter 47 : The Economics of Transnational Living’, International Migration Review, 2003
Chapter 48 : How Durable and New is Transnational Life? Historical Retrieval Though Local Comparison’, Diaspora, 2000

Volume IV: Policies

Part 11 : Understanding Migration Policies

Chapter 49 : Policy Ad-hocracy: The Paucity of Coordinated Perspectives and Policies’, Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1986
Chapter 50 : Modes of Immigration Politics in Liberal Democratic Societies’, International Migration Review, 1995
Chapter 51 : Theories of International Immigration Policy: A Comparative Analysis’, International Migration Review, 2000
Chapter 52 : Does Policy Matter? On Government Attempts at Controlling Unwanted Migration’

Part 12 : Forced Migration and Refugee Policy
Chapter 53 : The Deserving and The Undeserving? Refugees, Asylum Seekers and Welfare in Britain’, Critical Social Policy, 2002
Chapter 54 : Refugees in Diasporas: From Durable Solutions to Transnational Relations’, Refuge, 2006
Chapter 55 : A New Asylum Paradigm? Globalization, Migration and The Uncertain Future of The International Refugee Regime’, New Issues in Refugee Research Working Papers

Part 13 : International Migration and The State

Chapter 56 : Immigration, Citizenship, and The Nation State in France and Germany: A Comparative Historical Analysis’, International Sociology, 1990
Chapter 57 : Immigration Challenges The Nation State’, Challenge to The Nation-State
Chapter 58 : International Migration at The Dawn of The Twenty-First Century: The Role of The State’, Population and Development Review, 1999
Chapter 59 : International Migration and Sending Countries: Key Issues and Themes’, International Migration and Sending Countries
Chapter 60 : The Emerging Migration State’, International Migration Review, 2004

Part 14 : Migration Management

Chapter 61 : Prospects for Cooperative Management of International Migration in The 21st Century’, Asian and Pacific Migration Journal, 1996
Chapter 62 : The Politics of Immigration Policy: An Externalist Perspective’, American Behavioral Scientist, 1999
Chapter 63 : Death at The Border: Efficacy and Unintended Consequences of US Immigration Control Policy’, Population and Development Review, 2001
Chapter 64 : Why Migration Policies Fail’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 2004

Volume V: Processes


Part 15 : Integration and Incorporation

Chapter 65 : Integration in Theory and Practice: A Comparison of France and Britain’, West European Politics, 1994
Chapter 66 : Everything Old is New Again? Processes and Theories of Immigrant Incorporation’, International Migration Review, 1997
Chapter 67 : Why Islam is Like Spanish: Cultural Incorporation in Europe and The United States’, Politics and Society, 1999
Chapter 68 : Becoming Americans/Becoming New Yorkers: Immigrant Incorporation in a Majority Minority City, Host Societies and The Reception of Immigrants

Part 16 : Assimilation Debates

Chapter 69 : Toward a Reconciliation of "Assimilation" and ‘Pluralism’: The Interplay of Acculturation and Ethnic Retention’, International Migration Review, 1997
Chapter 70 : Rethinking Assimilation Theory for a New Era of Immigration’, International Migration Review, 1997
Chapter 71 : The Return of Assimilation? Changing Perspectives on Immigration and its Sequels in France, Germany, and The United States’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 2001
Chapter 72 : Assimilation and its Discontents’, in J : Stone and R : Dennis (eds.), Race and Ethnicity: Comparative and Theoretical Approaches

Part 17 : The Second Generation

Chapter 73 : The New Second Generation: Segmented Assimilation and its Variants Among Post 1965 Immigrant Youth’, Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1993
Chapter 74 : Segmented Assimilation: Issues, Controversies, and Recent Research on The New Second Generation’, International Migration Review, 1997
Chapter 75 : The Second Generation in Europe’, International Migration Review, 2003
Chapter 76 : Bright vs : Blurred Boundaries: Second Generation Assimilation and Exclusion in France, Germany, and The United States’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 2005

Part 18 : Immigration and Multiculturalism

Chapter 77 : The Australian Model of Immigration and Multiculturalism: Is it Applicable to Europe?’, International Migration Review, 1992
Chapter 78 : Multiculturalism and Immigration: A Comparison of The United States, Germany and Great Britain’, Theory and Society, 1996
Chapter 79 : Immigration, Citizenship, Multiculturalism: Exploring The Links, The Politics of Immigration