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{{short description |Movement of people for their benefit}}{{about| contemporary migration|a historical overview|History of human migration|pre-modern history (Neolithic to AD 1800)|Pre-modern human migration|specific types of migration|Immigration|and|Emigration}}{{Cleanup image captions|date=August 2023|s=yes}}{{use dmy dates|date=May 2024}}File:On the outskirts of the migration control center on the Ecuadorian side of the border in Rumichaca, Venezuelan travelers and immigrants wait their turn to be processed by the immigration service.jpg|thumb|300px|Venezuelan migrants being processed in EcuadorEcuadorFile:Ministrica obiskala pripadnike Slovenske vojske in URSZR, ki pomagajo v nastanitvenem centru in na meji 01.JPG|thumb|300x300px|Migrants and the monitoring Slovenian army at the border of Gornja Radgona, Styria, SloveniaSloveniaHuman migration is the movement of people from one place to another,WEB, Society, National Geographic, 2010-12-14, Introduction to Human Migration,weblink 2023-08-12, National Geographic Society, en, with intentions of settling, permanently or temporarily, at a new location (geographic region). The movement often occurs over long distances and from one country to another (external migration), but internal migration (within a single country) is the dominant form of human migration globally.World Migration Report 2020. International Organization for Migration, 2019. "The great majority of people in the world do not migrate across borders; much larger numbers migrate within countries (an estimated 740 million internal migrants in 2009)" (p. 19). "In 2019, there were an estimated 272 million international migrants globally (3.5% of the world’s population) .... it is evident that the vast majority of people continue to live in the countries in which they were born" (p. 21).Migration is often associated with better human capital at both individual and household level, and with better access to migration networks, facilitating a possible second move.ENCYCLOPEDIA, Razum, Oliver, Populations at Special Health Risk: Migrants, 2017,weblink International Encyclopedia of Public Health, 2nd, 591–598, Quah, Stella R., Oxford, Academic Press, en, 978-0128037089, October 11, 2022, Samkange-Zeeb, Florence, 10.1016/B978-0-12-803678-5.00345-3, October 14, 2022,weblink live, It has a high potential to improve human development, and some studies confirm that migration is the most direct route out of poverty.JOURNAL, Kumar, Shailendra, Choudhury, Sanghamitra, 2021-01-01, Migrant workers and human rights: A critical study on India's COVID-19 lockdown policy, Social Sciences & Humanities Open, en, 3, 1, 100130, 10.1016/j.ssaho.2021.100130, 234161193, 2590-2911, free, Age is also important for both work and non-work migration.JOURNAL, Coxhead, Ian, Cuong, Nguyen Viet, Vu, Linh Hoang, Migration in Vietnam: New Evidence from Recent Surveys, SSRN Electronic Journal, 2015, 10.2139/ssrn.2752834, 34975118,weblink People may migrate as individuals, in family units or in large groups.WEB,weblink Migrations country wise, 7 June 2014,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20160211025416weblink">weblink 2016-02-11, dead, There are four major forms of migration: invasion, conquest, colonization and emigration/immigration.BOOK, Encyclopedia of the City,weblink limited, Caves, R. W., Routledge, 2004, 978-0415252256, 461, People moving from their home due to forced displacement (such as a natural disaster or civil disturbance) may be described as displaced persons or, if remaining in the home country, internally-displaced persons. People who flee to a different country due to political, religious, or other types of persecution in their home country can formally request shelter in the host country. These people are commonly referred to as an asylum seekers. If the application is approved, their legal classification changes to that of refugees.WEB, What is a refugee?,weblink 2023-08-12, UNHCR,

Definition

File:Niger highway overloaded camion 2007.jpg|thumb|Migrants{{clarification needed|date=January 2024}} on a truck between Niamey and Kouré in NigerNigerDepending on the goal and reason for relocation, migrants can be divided into three categories: migrants, refugees, and asylum seekers. Each category is defined broadly as the combination of circumstances that motivate a person to change their location. As such, migrants are traditionally described as persons who change the country of residence for general reasons. These purposes may include better job opportunities or healthcare needs. This term is the most widely understood, as anyone changing their geographical location permanently is a migrant.In contrast, refugees are defined and described as persons who do not willingly relocate. The reasons for the refugees' migration usually involve war actions within the country or other forms of oppression, coming either from the government or non-governmental sources. Refugees are usually associated with people who must unwillingly relocate as fast as possible; hence, such migrants will likely relocate undocumented.Asylum seekers are associated with persons who also leave their country unwillingly, yet, who also do not do so under oppressing circumstances such as war or death threats. The motivation to leave the country for asylum seekers might involve an unstable economic or political situation or high rates of crime. Thus, asylum seekers relocate predominantly to escape the degradation of the quality of their lives.WEB, Migration vs. Immigration: Differences and Similarities,weblink 2020-10-22, thewordpoint.com, 27 August 2020, en, Nomadic movements usually are not regarded as migrations, as the movement is generally seasonal, there is no intention to settle in the new place, and only a few people have retained this form of lifestyle in modern times. Temporary movement for travel, tourism, pilgrimages, or the commute is also not regarded as migration, in the absence of an intention to live and settle in the visited places.WEB,weblink Migration vs. Immigration: Differences and Similarities, 27 August 2020,

Migration patterns and related numbers

(File:Migrants in the world 1960-2015-en.png|thumb|upright=1.4|The number of migrants in the world, 1960–2015WEB, 2017-09-29, International migrant stock, total,weblink The World Bank Data, )(File:Annual Net Migration Rate 2015–2020.svg|upright=1.7|thumb|Annual Net Migration Rate 2015–2020. Prediction by UN in 2019.)There exist many statistical estimates of worldwide migration patterns. The World Bank has published three editions of its Migration and Remittances Factbook, beginning in 2008, with a second edition appearing in 2011 and a third in 2016."Open Knowledge Repository: Migration and Remittances Factbook". World Bank Group. Retrieved 2019-08-11; Migrations and Remittances Factbook 2016, p. xiii: "Factbook 2016 builds on the two previous editions of Factbooks". The International Organisation for Migration (IOM) has published ten editions of the World Migration Report since 1999.World Migration ReportJOURNAL, 2019-01-02, World Migration Report 2020,weblink en, 1561-5502, The United Nations Statistics Division also keeps a database on worldwide migration.WEB,weblink United Nations Population Division | Department of Economic and Social Affairs, 2014-09-09, 2023-04-21,weblink dead, Recent advances in research on migration via the Internet promise better understanding of migration patterns and migration motives.JOURNAL, Oiarzabal, P. J., Reips, U.-D., 2012, Migration and diaspora in the age of information and communication technologies,weblink Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 38, 9, 1333–1338, 10.1080/1369183X.2012.698202, 144246309, Reips, U.-D., & Buffardi, L. (2012). "Studying migrants with the help of the Internet: Methods from psychology", Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 38(9), 1405–1424. {{doi|10.1080/1369183X.2012.698208}}Structurally, there is substantial South–South and North–North migration; in 2013, 38% of all migrants had migrated from developing countries to other developing countries, while 23% had migrated from high-income OECD countries to other high-income countries.Migration and Remittances Factbook 2016, p. 11 (reflecting figures from 2013). The United Nations Population Fund says that "while the North has experienced a higher absolute increase in the migrant stock since 2000 (32 million) compared to the South (25 million), the South recorded a higher growth rate. Between 2000 and 2013, the average annual rate of change of the migrant population in developing regions (2.3%) slightly exceeded that of the developed regions (2.1%)."WEB, 2013, International Migration 2013 (wall chart),weblink UNFPA, Substantial internal migration can also take place within a country, either seasonal human migration (mainly related to agriculture and tourism to urban places), or shifts of the population into cities (urbanisation) or out of cities (suburbanisation). However, studies of worldwide migration patterns tend to limit their scope to international migration.{| class="wikitable"weblink International Organization for Migration, 26 November 2019, 15, ! Year !! Number of migrants !! Migrants as a % of the world's population
| 2.3%
| 2.2%
| 2.3%
| 2.3%
| 2.9%
| 2.8%
| 2.8%
| 2.9%
| 3.2%
| 3.3%
Almost half of these migrants are women, one of the most significant migrant-pattern changes in the last half-century. Women migrate alone or with their family members and community. Even though female migration is largely viewed as an association rather than independent migration, emerging studies argue complex and manifold reasons for this.BOOK, Thapan, M., 2008, Series Introduction, Women and Migration in Asia, Palriwala, Uberoi, New Delhi, Sage Publications, 978-0761936756, 359, As of 2019, the top ten immigration destinations were:{{Div col|small=yes}} {{Div col end}}In the same year, the top countries of origin were:IOM. "Migration and migrants: A global overview {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210118155722weblink |date=2021-01-18 }}." Ch. 2 in World Migration Report 2020.{{Div col|small=yes}} {{Div col end}}Besides these rankings, according to absolute numbers of migrants, the Migration and Remittances Factbook also gives statistics for top immigration destination countries and top emigration origin countries according to percentage of the population; the countries that appear at the top of those rankings are entirely different from the ones in the above rankings and tend to be much smaller countries.Migration and Remittances Factbook 2016{{Rp|2, 4}}File:Brooklyn Chinatown.png|thumb|300px|Typical grocery store on 8th Avenue in one of the Brooklyn Chinatowns (布鲁克林華埠) on Long Island, New York. New York City's multiple Chinatowns in Queens (法拉盛華埠), Manhattan (紐約華埠), and Brooklyn are thriving as traditionally urban enclaves, as large-scale Chinese immigration continues into New York,WEB,weblink Yearbook of Immigration Statistics: 2013 Supplemental Table 2, U.S. Department of Homeland Security, 14 April 2016, WEB,weblink Yearbook of Immigration Statistics: 2012 Supplemental Table 2, U.S. Department of Homeland Security, 14 April 2016,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20141222152450weblink">weblink 22 December 2014, dead, WEB,weblink Yearbook of Immigration Statistics: 2011 Supplemental Table 2, U.S. Department of Homeland Security, 14 April 2016, NEWS,weblink Malaysian man smuggled illegal Chinese immigrants into Brooklyn using Queen Mary 2: authorities, John Marzulli, Daily News, New York, 9 May 2011, 14 April 2016, with the largest metropolitan Chinese population outside Asia,WEB,weblink Chinese New Year 2012 in Flushing, QueensBuzz.com, 25 January 2012, 14 April 2016, The New York metropolitan area contains the largest ethnic Chinese population outside of Asia, comprising an estimated 893,697 uniracial individuals as of 2017.WEB,weblink SELECTED POPULATION PROFILE IN THE UNITED STATES 2017 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates New York-Newark, NY-NJ-CT-PA CSA Chinese alone, (United States Census Bureau]], 27 January 2019,weblink 14 February 2020, dead, )As of 2013, the top 15 migration corridors (accounting for at least two million migrants each) were:{{Rp|5}}{{Div col|small=yes}}
  1. Mexico–United States
  2. Russian Federation–Ukraine
  3. Bangladesh–India
  4. Ukraine–Russian Federation
  5. Kazakhstan–Russian Federation
  6. China–United States
  7. Russian Federation–Kazakhstan
  8. Afghanistan–Pakistan
  9. Afghanistan–Iran
  10. China–Hong Kong
  11. India–United Arab Emirates
  12. West Bank and Gaza–Jordan
  13. India–United States
  14. India–Saudi Arabia
  15. Philippines–United States
{{Div col end}}

Economic impacts

World economy

File:Dorothea Lange, Drought refugees from Oklahoma camping by the roadside, Blythe, California, 1936.jpg|thumb|upright|Dorothea Lange, Drought refugees from Oklahoma camping by the roadside, Blythe, CaliforniaBlythe, CaliforniaThe impacts of human migration on the world economy have been largely positive. In 2015, migrants, who constituted 3.3% of the world population, contributed 9.4% of global GDP.BOOK,weblink People on the Move: Global Migration's Impact and Opportunity, McKinsey Global Institute, 2016, JOURNAL, Bove, Vincenzo, Elia, Leandro, Migration, Diversity, and Economic Growth, World Development (journal), World Development, 2017, 89, 227–239, 10.1016/j.worlddev.2016.08.012, free, 11566/263676, free, At a microeconomic level, the value of a human mobility is largely recognized by firms. A 2021 survey by the Boston Consulting Group found that 72% of 850+ executives across several countries and industries believed that migration benefited their countries, and 45% considered globally diverse employees a strategic advantage.WEB, 2022-06-06, When Innovation Has No Borders, Culture Is Key,weblink 2022-06-20, BCG Global, en, According to the Centre for Global Development, opening all borders could add $78 trillion to the world GDP.NEWS,weblink A world of free movement would be $78 trillion richer, 2017-07-13, The Economist, 2019-02-10, 0013-0613, JOURNAL, Clemens, Michael A., September 2011, Economics and Emigration: Trillion-Dollar Bills on the Sidewalk?, Journal of Economic Perspectives, en, 25, 3, 83–106, 10.1257/jep.25.3.83, 59507836, 0895-3309,weblink

Remittances

Remittances (funds transferred by migrant workers to their home country) form a substantial part of the economy of some countries. The top ten remittance recipients in 2018.{| class="wikitable sortable"!Rank!Country!Remittance (in billions of US dollars)!Percent of GDP
1{{Flag|2.80
2{{Flag|0.50
3{{Flag|9.14
4{{Flag|1.54
5{{Flag|0.96
6{{Flag|5.84
7{{Flag|8.43
8{{Flag|6.57
9{{Flag|5.73
10{{Flag|6.35
In addition to economic impacts, migrants also make substantial contributions in sociocultural and civic-political life. Sociocultural contributions occur in the following areas of societies: food/cuisine, sport, music, art/culture, ideas and beliefs; civic-political contributions relate to participation in civic duties in the context of accepted authority of the State.McAuliffe, Kitimbo & Khadria, 2019, 'Reflections on migrations' contributions in an era of increasing disruption and disinformation', World Migration Report 2020, IOM: Geneva. It is in recognition of the importance of these remittances that the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 10 targets to substantially reduce the transaction costs of migrants remittances to less than 3% by 2030.WEB, Goal ten targets,weblink 2020-09-23, UNDP, en, 2020-11-27,weblink dead,

Voluntary and forced migration

Migration is usually divided into voluntary migration and forced migration. The distinction between involuntary (fleeing political conflict or natural disaster) and voluntary migration (economic or labour migration) is difficult to make and partially subjective, as the motivators for migration are often correlated. The World Bank estimated that, as of 2010, 16.3 million or 7.6% of migrants qualified as refugees.WEB, Migration and Remittances Factbook 2011,weblink 25 March 2019, World Bank, 18, 2nd, Washington, D.C., This number grew to 19.5 million by 2014 (comprising approximately 7.9% of the total number of migrants, based on the figure recorded in 2013).WEB, Migration and Remittances Factbook 2016,weblink 25 March 2019, World Bank, 19–20, 3rd, Washington, D.C., As noted on p. xiii, the report presents migrant stocks for 2013, refugee numbers for 2014, remittance outflows for 2014, and remittance inflows for 2015. At levels of roughly 3 percent the share of migrants among the world population has remained remarkably constant over the last 5 decades.JOURNAL, Mathias, Czaika, Hein de, Haas, 2014, The Globalization of Migration: Has the World Become More Migratory?, International Migration Review, 48, 2, 283–323, 10.1111/imre.12095, 144759565,

Voluntary migration

Voluntary migration is based on the initiative and the free will of the person and is influenced by a combination of factors: economic, political and social: either in the migrants' country of origin (determinant factors or "push factors") or in the country of destination (attraction factors or "pull factors"). "Push-pull factors" are the reasons that push or attract people to a particular place. "Push" factors are the negative aspects(for example wars) of the country of origin, often decisive in people's choice to emigrate. The "pull" factors are the positive aspects of a different country that encourages people to emigrate to seek a better life. For example, the government of Armenia periodically gives incentives to people who will migrate to live in villages close to the border with Azerbaijan. This is an implementation of a push strategy, and the reason people do not want to live near the border is security concerns given tensions and hostility because of Azerbaijan.NEWS, More Armenian Border Villages Eligible For Tax Breaks, Subsidies,weblink 2021-05-01, «Ազատ Եվրոպա/Ազատություն» ռադիոկայան, 16 February 2021, hy, Badalian, Susan, Although the push-pull factors are opposed, both are sides of the same coin, being equally important. Although specific to forced migration, any other harmful factor can be considered a "push factor" or determinant/trigger factor, such examples being: poor quality of life, lack of jobs, excessive pollution, hunger, drought or natural disasters. Such conditions represent decisive reasons for voluntary migration, the population preferring to migrate in order to prevent financially unfavorable situations or even emotional and physical suffering.JOURNAL, Tataru, Georgiana, 2020-01-14, Migration – an Overview on Terminology, Causes and Effects,weblink Logos Universality Mentality Education Novelty: Law, 7, 2, 10–29, 10.18662/lumenlaw/24, free,

Forced migration

There are contested definitions of forced migration. However, the editors of a leading scientific journal on the subject, the Forced Migration Review, offer the following definition: Forced migration refers to the movements of refugees and internally displaced people (displaced by conflict) as well as people displaced by natural or environmental disasters, chemical or nuclear disasters, famine, or development projects.WEB, Welcome {{!, Forced Migration Review |url=https://www.fmreview.org/ |access-date=2022-11-16 |website=www.fmreview.org}} These different causes of migration leave people with one choice, to move to a new environment. Immigrants leave their beloved homes to seek a life in camps, spontaneous settlement, and countries of asylum.Colson, Elizabeth, "Forced Migration and the Anthropological Response". Journal of Refugee Studies. Vol. 16, No. 1, 2003, pp. 1–19By the end of 2018, there were an estimated 67.2 million forced migrants globally{{snd}}25.9 million refugees displaced from their countries, and 41.3 million internally displaced persons that had been displaced within their countries for different reasons. In 2022, 6 million Ukrainian people fled their country; meanwhile, 3 million Syrian people fled in 3 years.

Transit migration

Transit migration is a highly debated term with no official definition. The common understanding is that it describes immigrants who are in the process of moving to an end goal country. The term was first coined by the UN in 1990 to describe immigrants who were traveling through countries surrounding Europe to end up in a European Union state.BOOK, Basok, Tanya, New Migration Patterns in the Americas, The Discourse of "Transit Migration" in Mexico and its "Blind Spot": Changing Realities and New Vocabularies, 26 July 2018,weblink 85–107, 10.1007/978-3-319-89384-6_4, 978-3-319-89383-9, 158975397, SpringerLink, Another example of transit migrants is Central Americans who travel through Mexico in order to live in the United States.JOURNAL, Cantalapiedra, Eduardo Torre, Nava, Dulce María Mariscal, 2020-04-22, Batallando con fronteras: estrategias migratorias en tránsito de participantes en caravanas de migrantes,weblink Estudios Fronterizos, es, 21, 10.21670/ref.2005047, 219100760, 2395-9134, free, The term "transit migration" has generated a lot of debate among migration scholars and immigration institutions. Some criticize it as a Eurocentric term that was coined to place responsibility of migrants on states outside the European Union; and also to pressure those states to prevent migration onward to the European Union. Scholars note that EU countries also have identical migrant flows and therefore it is not clear (illogical or biased) why it is only migrants in non-EU countries that are labeled as transit migrants.JOURNAL, Düvell, Frank, 26 October 2010, Transit migration: A blurred and politicised concept,weblink Population Space and Place, 18, 4, 415–427, 10.1002/psp.631, Wiley Online Library, It is also argued that the term "transit" glosses over the complexity and difficulty of migrant journeys: migrants face many types of violence while in transit; migrants often have no set end destination and must adjust their plan as they move (migrant journeys can take years and go through several stages).

Contemporary labor migration theories

Overview

Numerous causes impel migrants to move to another country. For instance, globalization has increased the demand for workers in order to sustain national economies. Thus one category of economic migrants – generally from impoverished developing countries – migrates to obtain sufficient income for survival.NEWS,weblink Migration, United Nations Population Fund, {{request quotation|date=October 2018}}BOOK, Yeoh, Brenda S. A., Huang, Shirlena, Lam, Theodora, Transnational family dynamics in Asia, Triandafyllidou, Anna, Handbook of Migration and Globalisation,weblink Handbooks on Globalisation Series, Cheltenham, UK, Edward Elgar Publishing, 2018, 416, 978-1785367519, 2018-10-29, [...]families may assume transnational morphologies with the strategic intent of ensuring economic survival or maximising social mobility., Google Books, Such migrants often send some of their income homes to family members in the form of economic remittances, which have become an economic staple in a number of developing countries.Jason de Parle, "A Good Provider Leaves", New York Times, 22 Apr 2007. People may also move or are forced to move as a result of conflict, of human-rights violations, of violence, or to escape persecution. In 2014, the UN Refugee agency estimated that around 59.5 million people fell into this category. Other reasons people may move include to gain access to opportunities and services or to escape extreme weather. This type of movement, usually from rural to urban areas, may be classed as internal migration.{{request quotation|date=October 2018}} Sociology-cultural and ego-historical factors also play a major role. In North Africa, for example, emigrating to Europe counts as a sign of social prestige. Moreover, many countries were former colonies. This means that many have relatives who live legally in the (former) colonial metro pole and who often provide important help for immigrants arriving in that metropole.For example, Moroccans in France, Filipinos in the United States of America, Koreans in Japan or Samoans in New Zealand.Relatives may help with job research and with accommodation.JOURNAL, Geschiere, Peter, 2020, "The African family is large, very large" mobility and the flexibility of kinship – examples from Cameroon, Ethnography, 21, 3, 335–354, 10.1177/1466138120938076, 221039801, free, 11245.1/2cabfab4-2255-41ec-8133-4a2498454ae7, free, The geographical proximity of Africa to Europe and the long historical ties between Northern and Southern Mediterranean countries also prompt many to migrate.WEB, Fanack, The Key Drivers of North African Illegal Migration to Europe,weblink Fanack.com, 14 Jul 2015, dead,weblink 14 July 2015, The proximity of North Africa to southern Europe, the liberal mobility policies of most European countries, and the historical links between northern and southern Mediterranean countries are all key factors encouraging people to migrate to Europe., Whether a person decides to move to another country depends on the relative skill premier of the source and host countries. One is speaking of positive selection when the host country shows a higher skill premium than the source country. On the other hand, negative selection occurs when the source country displays a lower skill premium. The relative skill premia define migrants selectivity. Age heaping techniques display one method to measure the relative skill premium of a country.JOURNAL, Baten, Jörg, Stolz, Yvonne Stolz, Brain drain, numeracy and skill premia during the era of mass migration: reassessing the Roy-Borjas model, Explorations in Economic History, 2012, 49, 205–220, A number of theories attempt to explain the international flow of capital and people from one country to another.Jennissen, R. 2007. "Causality Chains in the International Migration Systems Approach." Population Research and Policy Review 26(4):411–436.

Research contributions

Recent academic output on migration comprises mainly journal articles. The long-term trend shows a gradual increase in academic publishing on migration, which is likely to be related to the general expansion of academic literature production, and the increased prominence of migration research.IOM. 'Chapter 4: Migration research and analysis: Growth, reach and recent contributions.' World Migration Report 2020. p.127.weblink {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210118172700weblink |date=2021-01-18 }}Migration and its research have further changed with the revolution in information and communication technologies.Oiarzabal, P. J., & Reips, U.-D. (2012). Migration and diaspora in the age of information and communication technologies. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 38(9), 1333–1338. {{doi|10.1080/1369183X.2012.698202}}Oiarzabal, P. J., & Reips, U.-D. (eds.) (2012). Migration and the Internet: Social networking and diasporas [Special issue]. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 38(9).Reips, U.-D., and L. Buffardi. 2012. "Studying migrants with the help of the Internet: Methods from psychology." Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 38(9):1405–1424. {{doi|10.1080/1369183X.2012.698208}}

Neoclassical economic theory

This migration theory states that the main reason for labour migration is wage difference between two geographic locations. These wage differences are usually linked to geographic labour demand and supply. It can be said that areas with a shortage of labour but an excess of capital have a high relative wage while areas with a high labour supply and a dearth of capital have a low relative wage. Labour tends to flow from low-wage areas to high-wage areas. Often, with this flow of labour comes changes in the sending and the receiving country. Neoclassical economic theory best describes transnational migration because it is not confined by international immigration laws and similar governmental regulations.

Dual labor market theory

Dual labour market theory states that pull factors in more developed countries mainly cause migration. This theory assumes that the labour markets in these developed countries consist of two segments: the primary market, which requires high-skilled labour, and the secondary market, which is very labour-intensive, requiring low-skilled workers. This theory assumes that migration from less developed countries into more developed countries results from a pull created by a need for labour in the developed countries in their secondary market. Migrant workers are needed to fill the lowest rung of the labour market because the native labourers do not want to do these jobs as they present a lack of mobility. This creates a need for migrant workers. Furthermore, the initial dearth in available labour pushes wages up, making migration even more enticing.

New economics of labor migration

This theory states that migration flows and patterns cannot be explained solely at the level of individual workers and their economic incentives but that wider social entities must also be considered. One such social entity is the household. Migration can be viewed as a result of risk aversion from a household that has insufficient income. In this case, the household needs extra capital that can be achieved through remittances sent back by family members who participate in migrant labour abroad. These remittances can also have a broader effect on the economy of the sending country as a whole as they bring in capital. Recent research has examined a decline in US interstate migration from 1991 to 2011, theorising that the reduced interstate migration is due to a decline in the geographic specificity of occupations and an increase in workers' ability to learn about other locations before moving there, through both information technology and inexpensive travel.JOURNAL,weblink Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, Understanding the Long-Run Decline in Interstate Migration, April 2012, 18 May 2019, Greg, Kaplan, Sam, Schulhofer-Wohl, Sam Schulhofer-Wohl, 58, Other researchers find that the location-specific nature of housing is more important than moving costs in determining labour reallocation.JOURNAL,weblink Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, The Role of Housing in Labour Reallocation, 29 November 2010, 18 May 2019, Morris, Davis, Jonas, Fisher, Marcelo, Veracierto, 50,

Relative deprivation theory

Relative deprivation theory states that awareness of the income difference between neighbours or other households in the migrant-sending community is essential in migration. The incentive to migrate is a lot higher in areas with a high level of economic inequality. In the short run, remittances may increase inequality, but in the long run, they may decrease it. There are two stages of migration for workers: first, they invest in human capital formation, and then they try to capitalise on their investments. In this way, successful migrants may use their new capital to provide better schooling for their children and better homes for their families. Successful high-skilled emigrants may serve as an example for neighbours and potential migrants who hope to achieve that level of success.

World systems theory

World-systems theory looks at migration from a global perspective. It explains that interaction between different societies can be an important factor in social change. Trade with one country, which causes an economic decline in another, may create incentive to migrate to a country with a more vibrant economy. It can be argued that even after decolonisation, the economic dependence of former colonies remains on mother countries. However, this view of international trade is controversial, and some argue that free trade can reduce migration between developing and developed countries. It can be argued that the developed countries import labour-intensive goods, which causes an increase in the employment of unskilled workers in the less developed countries, decreasing the outflow of migrant workers. Exporting capital-intensive goods from rich countries to developing countries also equalises income and employment conditions, thus slowing migration. In either direction, this theory can be used to explain migration between countries that are geographically far apart.

Osmosis theory

Based on the history of human migrationDjelti S, "The Evolution of the Human Migration Determinants" draft paper presented in the international conference on "Crossing Boundaries: Youth, Migration, and Development", At Alakhawayn University in Ifran, Morocco – March 2–4, 2017 osmosis theory studies the evolution of its natural determinants. In this theory migration is divided into two main types: simple and complicated. The simple migration is divided, in its turn, into diffusion, stabilisation and concentration periods. During these periods, water availability, adequate climate, security and population density represent the natural determinants of human migration. The complicated migration is characterised by the speedy evolution and the emergence of new sub-determinants, notably earning, unemployment, networks, and migration policies. Osmosis theoryDjelti S, "Osmosis: the Unifying Theory of Human Migration", Revue Algérienne d’Economie et du Management Vol. 08, N°: 02 (2017) explains analogically human migration by the biophysical phenomenon of osmosis. In this respect, the countries are represented by animal cells, the borders by the semipermeable membranes and the humans by ions of water. According to the theory, according to the osmosis phenomenon, humans migrate from countries with less migration pressure to countries with high migration pressure. To measure the latter, the natural determinants of human migration replace the variables of the second principle of thermodynamics used to measure the osmotic pressure.

Social-scientific theories

Sociology

A number of social scientists have examined immigration from a sociological perspective, paying particular attention to how immigration affects and is affected by, matters of race and ethnicity, as well as social structure. They have produced three main sociological perspectives: In the 21st century, as attention has shifted away from countries of destination, sociologists have attempted to understand how transnationalism allows us to understand the interplay between migrants, their countries of destination, and their countries of origins.BOOK,weblink Nations Unbound: Transnational Projects, Postcolonial Predicaments, and Deterritorialized Nation-States, Basch, Linda, Schiller, Nina Glick, Blanc, Christina Szanton, 2005, Routledge, 978-1135307035, en, In this framework, work on social remittances by Peggy Levitt and others has led to a stronger conceptualisation of how migrants affect socio-political processes in their countries of origin.JOURNAL, Levitt, Peggy, 1998, Social Remittances: Migration Driven Local-Level Forms of Cultural Diffusion, 2547666, The International Migration Review, 32, 4, 926–948, 10.2307/2547666, 12294302,
Much work also takes place in the field of integration of migrants into destination-societies.
For example:BOOK
, Hack-Polay
, Dieu
, 2013
, Reframing Migrant Integration
,weblink
, Kibworth, Leicestershire
, Book Guild Publishing
, 2016
, 978-1911320319
, 12 January 2020
,

Political science

Political scientists have put forth a number of theoretical frameworks relating to migration, offering different perspectives on processes of security,BOOK, Faist, Thomas, 2006, 103–119, Palgrave Macmillan US, en, 10.1057/9781403984678_6, 978-1349532650, Migration, Citizenship, Ethnos, The Migration-Security Nexus: International Migration and Security Before and After 9/11, 2043/686,weblink free, JOURNAL, Adamson, Fiona B., July 2006, Crossing Borders: International Migration and National Security, International Security, en, 31, 1, 165–199, 10.1162/isec.2006.31.1.165, 57567184, 0162-2889, citizenship,BOOK,weblink The Oxford Handbook of Citizenship, 2017, Oxford University Press, 978-0198805854, Shachar, Ayelet, Oxford Handbooks in Law, Oxford, New York, Bauboeck, Rainer, Bloemraad, Irene, Vink, Maarten, and international relations.BOOK,weblink Migration Theory: Talking across Disciplines, Brettell, Caroline B., Hollifield, James F., 2014, Routledge, 978-1317805984, en, Google Books, The political importance of diasporas has also become in teh 21st century a growing field of interest, as scholars examine questions of diaspora activism,JOURNAL, Bauböck, Rainer, 2006-02-23, Towards a Political Theory of Migrant Transnationalism, International Migration Review, 37, 3, 700–723, 10.1111/j.1747-7379.2003.tb00155.x, 55880642, 0197-9183, state-diaspora relations,JOURNAL, Délano, Alexandra, Gamlen, Alan, July 2014, Comparing and theorizing state–diaspora relations, Political Geography, 41, 43–53, 10.1016/j.polgeo.2014.05.005, 0962-6298, 2440/102448,weblink free, out-of-country voting processes,JOURNAL, Lafleur, Jean-Michel, 2014, The enfranchisement of citizens abroad: variations and explanations, Democratization, 22, 5, 840–860, 10.1080/13510347.2014.979163, 2268/181007, 143524485,weblink and states' soft power strategies.JOURNAL, Tsourapas, Gerasimos, 2018, Authoritarian emigration states: Soft power and cross-border mobility in the Middle East, International Political Science Review, 39, 3, 400–416, 10.1177/0192512118759902, 158085638,weblink In this field, the majority of work has focused on immigration politics, viewing migration from the perspective of the country of destination.BOOK,weblink Controlling Immigration: A Global Perspective, 3rd, Hollifield, James, Martin, Philip L., Orrenius, Pia, 2014, Stanford University Press, 978-0804787352, en, Google Books, With regard to emigration processes, political scientists have expanded on Albert Hirschman's framework on '"voice" vs. "exit" to discuss how emigration affects the politics within countries of origin.JOURNAL, Hirschman, Albert O., January 1993, Exit, Voice, and the Fate of the German Democratic Republic: An Essay in Conceptual History, World Politics, en, 45, 2, 173–202, 10.2307/2950657, 1086-3338, 2950657, 145574536, JOURNAL, Brubacker, Rogers, 1990, Frontier theses: Exit, voice, and loyalty in East Germany,weblinkweblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20130124105756weblink">weblink dead, January 24, 2013, Migration World,

Historical theories

Ravenstein

{{unreferenced section|date=May 2020}}Certain laws of social science have been proposed to describe human migration. The following was a standard list after Ernst Georg Ravenstein's proposal in the 1880s:
  1. every migration flow generates a return or counter migration.
  2. the majority of migrants move a short distance.
  3. migrants who move longer distances tend to choose big-city destinations.
  4. urban residents are often less migratory than inhabitants of rural areas.
  5. families are less likely to make international moves than young adults.
  6. most migrants are adults.
  7. large towns grow by migration rather than natural increase.
  8. migration stage by stage (step migration).
  9. urban, rural difference.
  10. migration and technology.
  11. economic condition.

Push and Pull

Demographer Everett S. Lee's model divides factors causing migrations into two groups of factors: push and pull. Push factors are things that are unfavourable about the home area that one lives in, and pull factors are things that attract one to another host area.JOURNAL, 2060063, A Theory of Migration, Demography, Everett S., Lee, 1966, 3, 1, 47–57, 10.2307/2060063, 46976641, free, Guido Dorigo, and Waldo Tobler, "Push-pull migration laws." Annals of the Association of American Geographers 73.1 (1983): 1-17 onlinePush factors:{{Div col|small=yes}}
  • Not enough jobs
  • Few opportunities
  • Conscription (draft young men into army)
  • Famine or drought
  • Political fear of persecution
  • Poor medical care
  • Loss of wealth
  • Natural disasters
  • Death threats
  • Desire for more political or religious freedom
  • Pollution
  • Poor housing
  • Discrimination
  • Poor chances of marrying
  • War or threat of invasion
  • Disease
{{Div col end}}Pull factors:{{Div col|small=yes}}
  • Job opportunities
  • Better living conditions
  • The feeling of having more political or religious freedom
  • Enjoyment
  • Education
  • Better medical care
  • Attractive climates
  • Security
  • Family links
  • Industry
  • Better chances of marrying
{{Div col end}}

Climate cycles

The modern field of climate history suggests that the successive waves of Eurasian nomadic movement throughout history have had their origins in climatic cycles, which have expanded or contracted pastureland in Central Asia, especially Mongolia and to its west the Altai. People were displaced from their home ground by other tribes trying to find land that essential flocks could graze, each group pushing the next further to the south and west, into the highlands of Anatolia, the Pannonian Plain, into Mesopotamia, or southwards, into the rich pastures of China. Bogumil Terminski uses the term "migratory domino effect" to describe this process in the context of Sea People invasion.BOOK, Terminski, Bogumil, Environmentally-Induced Displacement. Theoretical Frameworks and Current Challenges, CEDEM, Université de Liège, 2012,

Food, sex, and security

The theory is that migration occurs because individuals search for food, sex and security outside their usual habitation; Idyorough (2008) believes that towns and cities are a creation of the human struggle to obtain food, sex and security. To produce food, security and reproduction, human beings must, out of necessity, move out of their usual habitation and enter into indispensable social relationships that are cooperative or antagonistic. Human beings also develop the tools and equipment to interact with nature to produce the desired food and security. The improved relationship (cooperative relationships) among human beings and improved technology further conditioned by the push and pull factors all interact together to cause or bring about migration and higher concentration of individuals into towns and cities. The higher the technology of production of food and security and the higher the cooperative relationship among human beings in the production of food and security and the reproduction of the human species, the higher would be the push and pull factors in the migration and concentration of human beings in towns and cities. Countryside, towns and cities do not just exist, but they do so to meet the basic human needs of food, security and the reproduction of the human species. Therefore, migration occurs because individuals search for food, sex and security outside their usual habitation. Social services in the towns and cities are provided to meet these basic needs for human survival and pleasure.Idyorough, 2008

Other models

Migration governance

By their very nature, international migration and displacement are transnational issues concerning the origin and destination States and States through which migrants may travel (often referred to as "transit" States) or in which they are hosted following displacement across national borders. And yet, somewhat paradoxically, the majority of migration governance has historically remained with individual states. Their policies and regulations on migration are typically made at the national level.McAuliffe, M. and A.M. Goossens. 2018. "Regulating international migration in an era of increasing interconnectedness". In: Handbook of Migration and Globalisation (A. Triandafyllidou, ed.). Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham/Northampton, pp. 86–104. For the most part, migration governance has been closely associated with State sovereignty. States retain the power of deciding on the entry and stay of non-nationals because migration directly affects some of the defining elements of a State.For example, a permanent population and a defined territory, as per article 1 of the 1933 Montevideo Convention on the Rights andDuties of States. Comparative surveys reveal varying degrees of openness to migrants across countries, considering policies such as visa availability, employment prerequisites, and paths to residency.WEB, 2022-02-05, The CEO Agenda for an Era of Innovation Without Borders,weblink 2022-06-20, United States – EN, en-US, Bilateral and multilateral arrangements are features of migration governance at an international level. There are several global arrangements in the form of international treaties in which States have reached an agreement on the application of human rights and the related responsibilities of States in specific areas. The 1966 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees (Refugee Convention) are two significant examples notable for being widely ratified. Other migration conventions have not been so broadly accepted, such as the International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families, which still has no traditional countries of destination among its States parties. Beyond this, there have been numerous multilateral and global initiatives, dialogues and processes on migration over several decades. The Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration (Global Compact for Migration) is another milestone, as the first internationally negotiated statement of objectives for migration governance striking a balance between migrants' rights and the principle of States' sovereignty over their territory. Although it is not legally binding, the Global Compact for Migration was adopted by consensus in December 2018 at a United Nations conference in which more than 150 United Nations Member States participated and, later that same month, in the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA), by a vote among the Member States of 152 to 5 (with 12 abstentions).IOM. 'Chapter 11: Recent developments in the global governance of migration: An update to the World Migration Report 2018.' World Migration Report 2020. p. 291. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191221182355weblink |date=2019-12-21 }}

Migration programs

Colonialism and colonization opens up distant territories and their people to migration, having dominated what is identified as modern migration. Colonialism globalized systems of migration and established ties effective until today.BOOK, Mayblin, Lucy, Migration Studies and Colonialism, Polity, Cambridge Medford (Mass.), 2021-01-26, 978-1-5095-4293-2, While classic modern colonialism relied on the subjugation and rule of local indigenous peoples by small groups of conquering metroploitan people, soon forced migration, through slavery or indentured servitude supplanted the subjugated local indigenous peoples.Settler colonialism later continued or established the rule of the colonizers through migration, particularly settlement.Settler colonies relied on the attraction of metropolitan migrants with the promise of settlement and increasingly outnumbering, displacing or killing indigenous peoples.Only in the late stage of colonialism migration flows oriented towards the metropole instead of out or outside of it. After decolonization migration ties between former colonies to former metropoles have been continuing. Todays independent countries have developed selective or targeted foreign worker policies or programs, with the aim of boosting economies with skilled or relatively cheap new local labour, while discrimination and exploitation are often fed by ethnic nationalist opposition to such policies.BOOK, Gonzalez, Gilbert G., Guest Workers Or Colonized Labor?, Routledge, Boulder (Colo.), 2013, 978-1-61205-447-6,

See also

{{Div col|colwidth=16em}} {{Div col end}}

References

{{Reflist}}

Sources and further reading

  • Anderson, Vivienne. and Johnson, Henry. (eds) Migration, Education and Translation: Cross-Disciplinary Perspectives on Human Mobility and Cultural Encounters in Education Settings. New York: Routledge, 2020.
  • Behdad, Ali. A Forgetful Nation: On Immigration and Cultural Density in the United States, Duke UP, 2005.
  • Brettell, Caroline B.; Hollifield, James F. Migration Theory(Routledge, 2000) [Migration Theory online]
  • Chaichian, Mohammad. Empires and Walls: Globalisation, Migration, and Colonial Control, Leiden: Brill, 2014.
  • Jared Diamond, Guns, germs and steel. A short history of everybody for the last 13'000 years, 1997.
  • De La Torre, Miguel A., Trails of Terror: Testimonies on the Current Immigration Debate, Orbis Books, 2009.
  • Fell, Peter and Hayes, Debra. What are they doing here? A critical guide to asylum and immigration, Birmingham (UK): Venture Press, 2007. {{ISBN?|date=December 2022}}
  • Hanlon, Bernadette and Vicino, Thomas J. Global Migration: The Basics, New York and London: Routledge, 2014.
  • de Haas, Hein. How Migration Really Works, Penguin, 2023.
  • Harzig, Christiane, and Dirk Hoerder. What is migration history? (John Wiley & Sons, 2013) online.
  • Hoerder, Dirk. Cultures in Contact. World Migrations in the Second Millennium, Duke University Press, 2002. {{ISBN?|date=December 2022}}
  • Idyorough, Alamveabee E. "Sociological Analysis of Social Change in Contemporary Africa", Makurdi: Aboki Publishers, 2015.{{ISBN?|date=December 2022}}
  • IOM World Migration Report, see World Migration Report International Organization for Migration
  • Kleiner-Liebau, Désirée. Migration and the Construction of National Identity in Spain, Madrid / Frankfurt, Iberoamericana / Vervuert, Ediciones de Iberoamericana, 2009. {{ISBN|978-8484894766}}.
  • Knörr, Jacqueline. Women and Migration. Anthropological Perspectives, Frankfurt & New York: Campus Verlag & St. Martin's Press, 2000. {{ISBN?|date=December 2022}}
  • Knörr, Jacqueline. Childhood and Migration. From Experience to Agency, Bielefeld: Transcript, 2005.{{ISBN?|date=December 2022}}
  • Manning, Patrick. Migration in World History, New York and London: Routledge, 2005. {{ISBN?|date=December 2022}}
  • Miller, Mark & Castles, Stephen (1993). The Age of Migration: International Population Movements in the Modern World. Guilford Press. {{ISBN?}}
  • Migration for Employment, Paris: OECD Publications, 2004. {{ISBN?|date=December 2022}}
  • OECD International Migration Outlook 2007, Paris: OECD Publications, 2007.{{ISBN?|date=December 2022}}
  • Pécoud, Antoine and Paul de Guchteneire (Eds): Migration without Borders, Essays on the Free Movements of People (Berghahn Books, 2007). {{ISBN?|date=December 2022}}
  • Purohit, A. K. (ed.) The Philosophy of Evolution, Yash Publishing House, Bikaner, 2010. {{ISBN|8186882359}}.
  • Abdelmalek Sayad. The Suffering of the Immigrant, Preface by Pierre Bourdieu, Polity Press, 2004. {{ISBN?|date=December 2022}}
  • BOOK, Who We Are And How We Got Here – Ancient DNA and the New Science of the Human Past, David, Reich, Pantheon Books, 2018, 978-1101870327,
    • NEWS, Diamond, Jared, Jared Diamond, A Brand-New Version of Our Origin Story,weblink April 20, 2018, The New York Times, April 23, 2018,
  • Stalker, Peter. No-Nonsense Guide to International Migration, New Internationalist, 2nd ed., 2008. {{ISBN?|date=December 2022}}
  • White, Micheal (Ed.) (2016). International Handbook of Migration and Population Distribution. Springer. {{ISBN?}}

Journals

External links

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