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Revisiting Migration Systems and Cumulative Causation Theory'

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Examining Migration Dynamics:

Networks and Beyond


24–26 September 2013
Lady Margaret Hall, University of Oxford

Conference
Handbook
Tuesday 24 September 2013 Wednesday 25 September 2013 Thursday 26 September 2013
09:00
Keynote II Migrants as social actors Keynote III Feedback processes in migration
Guest speaker: Ewa Morawska Guest speaker: Douglas Massey
THEMIS project speaker: Cindy Horst THEMIS project speaker: Godfried Engbersen
10:00 Discussant: Ronald Skeldon Discussant: Hein de Haas

Tea & coffee break Tea & coffee break


11:00
Parallel Parallel Parallel Parallel Parallel Parallel Parallel Parallel Parallel
Session Session Session Session Session Session Session Session Session
I(A) I(B) I(C) I(D) IV(A) IV(B) IV(C) IV(D) IV(E)
12:00

13:00
Lunch Lunch

Registration open Parallel Parallel Parallel Parallel Parallel Parallel Parallel Parallel Parallel
14:00 [1330-1500]
Session Session Session Session Session Session Session Session Session
II(A) II(B) II(C) II(D) V(A) V(B) V(C) V(D) V(E)
Tea & coffee break
15:00 Welcome address & THEMIS
Tea & coffee break Tea & coffee break
introduction
Keynote I Emergence and
16:00 development of migration systems Parallel Parallel Parallel Parallel Parallel Parallel Parallel Parallel
Guest speaker: Thomas Faist Session Session Session Session Session Session Session Session
THEMIS project speaker: Oliver Bakewell III(A) III(B) III(C) III(D) VI(A) VI(B) VI(C) VI(D)
Discussant: Sara Curran
17:00 Concluding panel discussion
Programme overview

Led by: Maria Lucinda Fonseca


Conference welcome drinks Stephen Castles, THEMIS team members and guests
18:00 reception
Conference dinner drinks reception

19:00
Conference dinner
[1900-2200]

CONFERENCE THEMES: Migration systems Feedback Social actors Methodology


Theorizing the Evolution of European
Migration Systems (THEMIS)

www.imi.ox.ac.uk/projects/themis
THEMIS is a four-year project looking at the way in which patterns of migration to Europe develop. Under what
conditions do the movements of a few pioneers lead to the growth of migration from the same origin area and the
emergence of a migration system that is sustained over time? When do such patterns not emerge? How
important are social networks in shaping such migration patterns? What are the other key factors involved? These
are some of the questions that the THEMIS project is exploring as it seeks to bridge the theories on the initiation
and continuation of migration, and to offer a critical advance on migration systems theory.
To address these questions, the THEMIS international project team has taken a comparative approach to examine
the evolution of migration between different origin and destination localities over the last four decades. These
research sites have been selected for the diversity of their migration patterns. The origin areas are several
districts in three countries: Brazil, Morocco and Ukraine; and the destination areas are in four European countries:
the Netherlands (Amsterdam and Rotterdam), Norway (Oslo), Portugal (Lisbon and the Algarve) and the United
Kingdom (London).
The project team has undertaken qualitative and quantitative research using common research protocols to
ensure comparability. In destination localities, semi-structured interviews and surveys were conducted among
migrants from the three origin countries. In origin areas, similar methods were implemented among returned
migrants and family members of migrants. Through these methods, the project team are building a detailed
picture of many aspects of these different migration corridors, including the characteristics of migrants, the range
of individual migrant trajectories, the mechanisms by which people chose their destination, the institutions that
facilitate migration, the role of social networks, and the changing attitudes of migrants and non-migrants.
In this final year of the THEMIS project, the focus of the research is now on the analysis of this very rich database.
The analysis proceeds mainly through the writing of academic articles, many of which are being presented in this
conference ‘Examining Migration Dynamics: Networks and Beyond’.
In these three days, we hope that the conference will provide an excellent forum for discussing the ideas
underlying THEMIS, for critical reflection on initial project results, and to open up a much wider debate around the
broad conference themes: how enduring patterns of migration emerge, are sustained and decline; the mechanisms
by which the migration processes of yesterday influence those of today; and, the role of the migrant as a social
actor in the face of these historical and social processes.
The THEMIS project is co-ordinated by the International Migration Institute (IMI) at the University of Oxford, and
carried out with three collaborating project partners:
 Citizenship, Migration and the City (CIMIC) Research Group, Erasmus University Rotterdam (EUR), The
Netherlands
 Institute of Geography and Spatial Planning, University of Lisbon (IGOT-UL), Portugal
 Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO), Norway
In addition, research in the origin countries was conducted in partnership with the Universidade do Vale do Rio
Doce, Governador Valadares, Minas Gerais, Brazil; the Institute of Sociology, National Academy of Sciences, Kiev,
Ukraine; and the National Institute of Statistics and Economics, Rabat, Morocco.
This project is funded by ‘New Opportunities for Research Funding Agency Co-operation in Europe’ (NORFACE)
through their Research Programme on Migration.
Additional match funding provided to IMI by the Oxford Martin School, is also gratefully acknowledged, and has
helped to make this event possible.
Partners

International Migration Institute (IMI)


www.imi.ox.ac.uk
The International Migration Institute (IMI) is committed to developing a long-term and forward-looking
perspective on international migration as part of global change. It aims to advance understanding of how migration
shapes and is shaped by broader development processes. Founded in 2006, IMI is a member of the Oxford Martin
School and forms part of the Oxford Department of International Development.
IMI aims to advance understanding of the multi-level forces driving current and future migration processes. It is
investigating the way that human mobility is changing the face of global society. IMI research aims to provide an
understanding of who is migrating, where to, why, and what impacts these movements have on both receiving
countries and the societies left behind.
The Institute works with researchers and policy-makers in the global South and North to pioneer new theoretical
and methodological approaches, and strengthen global capacity for research. The core research activities of IMI fit
within seven broad themes:
 African Migrations;
 Migration and Development;
 Migration and Environment;
 Migration Futures;
 Migration Policies and Governance;
 Rethinking Migration Theory; and
 Transnationalism and Diasporas.
IMI researchers are helping to create the next generation of migration scholars through teaching on the MSc in
Migration Studies course and supervising doctoral research students. The MSc in Migration Studies combines
lectures, small tutorial groups, discussion seminars, and individual dissertation supervision. More information is
available at: www.imi.ox.ac.uk/teaching/msc-in-migration-studies.

Citizenship, Migration and the City (CIMIC),


Erasmus University of Rotterdam (EUR)
www.cimic-eur.com
The Citizenship, Migration and the City (CIMIC) research group at Erasmus University of Rotterdam studies the
reshaping of citizenship in the context of the increased mobility of persons and populations. Key to this research is
the analysis of the social consequences of globalization in terms of new patterns of migration and citizenship and
new configurations of urban spaces and recalibrations of nation-states. CIMIC is an interdisciplinary research
group, rooted in the Department of Sociology but which works closely with scholars from other disciplines. The
Migration research cluster of CIMIC studies new and irregular patterns of international migration. The power of
the state to define differential opportunities (‘civic stratification’) for different categories of migrants, such as
irregular migrants, asylum seekers and low- and highly-skilled labourers is of particular interest. Another
theoretical interest is the systematic nature of international migration flows. CIMIC is involved in extensive
research on integration, the interactions between transnationalism and integration, and the (semi-) incorporation
of categories of regular and irregular labour migrants in advanced societies. Finally, CIMIC studies the differential
involvement of categories of migrants in crime. CIMIC is also member of the international research network
IMISCOE (www.imiscoe.org), and will be co-ordinating this network from April 2014.
Institute of Geography and Spatial Planning,
University of Lisbon (IGOT-UL)
www.ceg.ul.pt/migrare
The Migration, Spaces and Societies (MIGRARE) Research Unit is based within the Centre of Geographical Studies
at the Institute of Geography and Spatial Planning (IGOT) at the University of Lisbon. The MIGRARE research unit
is the formalisation of a group that since 1998 has developed projects, and organised meetings, courses and
research activities in the areas of migration, urban governance and social transformations in Europe, with a
particular emphasis on Portugal.
The research objectives are based upon theoretical development and applied research on migration, land
management (particularly in urban areas), and contributing to the establishment and development of a framework
to aid decision-making that will ultimately lead to the creation of socially-sustainable environments. It seeks to
incorporate contributions from different theoretical and methodological perspectives and to promote scientific
investigation in the areas of migration and demographic ageing, and their effect on processes of demographic and
socio-spatial transformation across distinct geographical scales. The centre aims to promote research from an
interdisciplinary and comparative perspective to support the development of intercultural relations, diversity
planning, and new forms of urban governance that contribute to the socio-territorial inclusion of immigrants; and
also to develop migration policies promoting the development of origin and destination regions of immigrants.

Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO)


www.prio.no
The Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO) conducts research on the conditions for peaceful relations between
states, groups and people. Founded in 1959, PRIO is an independent research institution known for its effective
synergy of basic and policy-relevant research. Researchers at PRIO work to identify new trends in global conflict,
as well as to formulate and document new understandings of and responses to armed conflict. The institute seeks
to understand how people are impacted by, and cope with, armed conflict, and we study the normative
foundations of peace and violence.
Research at the Institute is therefore multidisciplinary and concentrates on the driving forces and consequences of
violent conflict, and on ways in which peace can be built, maintained and spread. From 2002 through 2012, PRIO
hosted the Centre for the Study of Civil War (CSCW), a long-term, interdisciplinary initiative that was awarded
Centre of Excellence status and core funding by the Research Council of Norway. The diversity of disciplines at
PRIO creates a thriving research community that attracts both scholars and funding from around the world.
The Institute owns and hosts the editorial offices of two international peer-reviewed journals – Journal of Peace
Research and Security Dialogue – both of which are edited at PRIO and published by Sage Publications in London.
In addition, PRIO houses the editors of International Area Studies Review and the Journal of Military Ethics. The
Institute also publishes reports and policy briefs. Institute researchers maintain high levels of productivity in the
form of peer-reviewed articles in top international journals and books with reputable academic publishers.
At PRIO, academic research and engagement in peace processes go hand in hand: all peace building engagements
are rooted in solid research competence and feed into on-going research – and ultimately to published academic
work. The Institute’s policy-relevant findings are in high demand among international bodies (the UN, the World
Bank), NGOs, the media and governments, including a number of Norwegian ministries.
Funders

NORFACE - New Opportunities for Research Funding


Co-operation in Europe
www.norface-migration.org
NORFACE is a partnership between fifteen research councils to increase co-operation in research and research
policy in Europe. The fifteen partners involved are the research councils for the social sciences from Austria,
Canada, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, Ireland, The Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Slovenia,
Sweden and the United Kingdom. NORFACE formalises this existing working relationship and provides a framework
and a vision for a durable multi-national strategic partnership in research funding and practice.
NORFACE is an ambitious programme of communication, enquiry, sharing of experience and action. It started in
2004 and has developed a close partnership and network of European national agencies responsible for funding
research in the social sciences. The NORFACE partners together provide the capacity for significant levels of co-
operative research policy and practice. The plan of work follows a logical progression from putting governance and
good management of the NORFACE network in place, to information exchange, analysis, research co-operation,
strategic thinking and, finally, co-operation on two pilot programmes and the launch of a full scale transnational
research programme.
NORFACE receives core funding from the European Commission's 6th-7th Framework Programme, under ERA-
NET scheme.
THEMIS is one of twelve projects funded under the NORFACE Research Programme on Migration, responding to
the theme of ‘Migration in Europe: Social, Economic, Cultural and Policy Dynamics’. With funding this programme,
NORFACE recognised that in Europe there is a great need to build a new synergetic body of research that will
contribute strongly to the theoretical understanding and knowledge in the area of migration research. The
scientific coordinator of the Research Programme on Migration is Professor Christian Dustmann, University
College of London/CReAM.

Oxford Martin School


www.oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk
The Oxford Martin School is a unique, interdisciplinary research community of over 300 scholars working across
the University of Oxford to address the most pressing global challenges and opportunities of the 21st century.
The School supports over 35 research teams who are working to find solutions to some of the biggest questions
that concern our future.
Founded in 2005 through the vision and generosity of Dr James Martin, the Oxford Martin School has grown into
a global centre for interdisciplinary scholarship and thinking about the future. The School is developing new
approaches to some of the most intractable questions. Research is organised via four core themes: health and
medicine; energy and environment; technology and society; and ethics and governance.
From DPhil students to tenured Professors, the School acts as a central hub in facilitating collaboration and
exchange, not just within the University of Oxford, but also through our networks with policy makers, business
leaders and other leading experts. The School’s research is helping to better anticipate the consequences of our
collective actions, and to influence policy and behaviour globally.
The Oxford Martin School is supported by a small core team of professionals who work to facilitate collaborative
activity, foster public engagement, and translate and transmit ideas to influential audiences. Professor Ian Goldin,
University of Oxford is the director of the School. The School provides match funding provided to IMI that has
helped to make this event possible.
THEMIS team & committees

International Migration Institute (IMI) Institute of Geography and Spatial


 Dr Oliver Bakewell Planning, University of Lisbon (IGOT-UL)
Principal Investigator  Professor Maria Lucinda Fonseca
 Dr Hein de Haas THEMIS Co-Applicant
 Dr Agnieszka Kubal  Dr Sónia Pereira
 Dominque Jolivet  Dr Alina Esteves
 Kate Prudden  Dr Jennifer McGarrigle
 Professor Stephen Castles  Dora Sampaio
Also previously Professor Robin Cohen (original  Juliana Iorio
THEMIS PI) and Dr Olivia Sheringham Also previously Rui Carvalho

Citizenship, Migration and the City


(CIMIC), Erasmus University Rotterdam
(EUR)
 Professor Godfried Engbersen
THEMIS Co-Applicant Collaborating researchers (origin
 Dr Erik Snel countries)
 Dr Masja van Meeteren
 Dr Kateryna Ivashschenko
 Marije Faber
Institute of Sociology, National Academy of
 Margrietha ‘t Hart
Sciences, Ukraine
Also previously Sanne van de Pol and Rianne Dekker  Professor Sueli Siqueira
Universidade do Vale do Rio Doce, Brazil
Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO)  Rachid Touhtou
 Professor Cindy Horst National Institute of Statistics and Economics,
THEMIS Co-Applicant Morocco
 Dr Jørgen Carling
 Jennifer Wu
Also previously Rojan Ezzati and Tatyana Tkachenko

THEMIS Scientific Advisory Committee


This panel of migration research experts provide informal support and advice to our research team. We are very
grateful to the members for their contributions during the course of the project.
 Professor Joaquín Arango, Universidad Complutense de Madrid
 Dr Christina Boswell, Edinburgh University
 Professor Sara Curran, Seattle University
 Professor Timothy Hatton, University of Essex / Australian National University
 Professor Ceri Peach, Department of Geography, University of Oxford
 Professor Ronald Skeldon, University of Sussex

The Programme Committee and abstract review panel comprised the Principal Investigator, Co-Applicants,
Scientific Advisory Committee members, some members of the wider the THEMIS team, and Professor Han
Entzinger (EUR). We wish to express our many thanks to all of these individuals for their time and their invaluable
assistance in supporting the development of this conference.
Conference themes

Why do some migrants set off the movement of thousands of people, while others are followed only by a few, or
remain virtually alone in a destination country? Some answers can be found in the variation in economic and social
conditions in different places. Another vital part of the puzzle relates to the historical, social and cultural practices
of migration: those who move now are following in the footsteps of those who left before. This conference
examines how enduring patterns of migration emerge, are sustained and decline; the mechanisms by which the
migration processes of yesterday influence those of today; and the role of the migrant as a social actor in the face
of these historical and social processes.
Such considerations have guided the THEMIS project over the last four years and for this conference we have
invited participants to reflect on three broad themes arising from the project. The key note and majority of parallel
sessions have been grouped around these same main themes, described below. Two further parallel sessions are
dedicated to examining some of the different methodologies used in migration research. The approaches
employed in the extensive data collection undertaken as part of the THEMIS project will also be presented in these
sessions.

Emergence and development of migration systems:


What explains the emergence and establishment of migration systems? With time, the initial moves of pioneer
migrants might result in relatively stable patterns of migration which exhibit their own dynamics. Cumulative
causation, the emergence of a system, may not however be concerned with passing a threshold in numbers; low
levels of migration between particular localities, either in the international or internal domain, may also be
associated with system dynamics. We are exploring the evolution and the life of migration systems – their
beginnings, development, and sustenance, but also their potential weakening and decline. The speakers for this
key note are:
 Thomas Faist: The Mobility Turn: A New Paradigm for the Social Sciences?
 Oliver Bakewell: Does Many Migrants a Migration System Make?
 Sara Curran [Discussant]

Feedback processes in migration:


Migration between localities is influenced by a set of factors not limited solely to conditions posed by these two
contexts – that of origin, and that of destination – but also including previous histories as well as social and
cultural conditions of movement. It is important to examine a range of mechanisms by which these feedback
processes operate. This enquiry takes us beyond a narrow focus on networks to include interactions such as those
with the state, employers, travel agencies, educational establishments and new connections created by social
media and ICT. We are concerned with these various forms of feedback and its transmission, critically re-thinking
the role of migration networks and their composition, as well as examining emerging forms of indirect feedback,
and their potential contribution to the evolution of systems over time. The speakers for this key note are:
 Douglas Massey: Policy Feedbacks and their Influence on the Evolution of the North American Migration
System
 Godfried Engbersen: Networks and Beyond. Feedback Channels and the Diminutive Causation of
International Migration
 Hein de Haas [Discussant]
Migrants as social actors:
How is the migration of an individual intertwined with the migratory movements of others? The role of agency of
migrants is often missing from an analysis of migration systems. Such agency, in an interplay with other structural
factors, helps to explain why, once started, migration processes tend to gain their own momentum. This theme
challenges the determinism which pervades much of the earlier work on systems and incorporates a richer analysis
of the agency of social actors in migration processes. We are exploring the role of pioneer migrants, how early
migrants shape subsequent migrations, as well as highlighting the rich texture of various migration cultures. The
speakers for this key note are:
 Ewa Morawska: Changing Contexts, Changing Actors: Accounting for Migration Dynamics
 Cindy Horst: Conceptualizing migrants as social actors: Reflections from THEMIS
 Ronald Skeldon [Discussant]

www.vandanamu.org
99% Smiles, 1% Sweat, 100% Cotton

Our conference bags were made by Vandanamu Ethical Cottons, ethically-sourced cotton bags. Below are the
sewing team in India hard at work.
Biographies

Dr Oliver Bakewell
Oliver Bakewell is the Co-Director of the University of Oxford's International Migration Institute (IMI) in the
Department of International Development. His research interests include migration, diasporas and global
development, social theory and migration, ‘forced’ versus ‘voluntary’ migration, borderlands and African migration.
He is the principal investigator for both the Theorizing the Evolution of European Migration Systems (THEMIS) and
the Mobility in the African Great Lakes projects. He is also leading research into the formation of African diasporas
within the African continent as part of the Oxford Diasporas Programme. Recent publications include: ‘Re-
launching Migration Systems’ Migration Studies (forthcoming); ‘Migration systems, pioneer migrants and the role
of agency’, Journal of Critical Realism (with Kubal, A. and de Haas, H, 2012); and 'Conceptualising displacement
and migration: Processes, conditions, and categories' (2011), in K. Koser and S. Martin (eds.), The Migration-
Displacement Nexus: Patterns, Processes, and Policies. Dr Bakewell is a James Martin Fellow and teaches on the
MSc in Migration Studies at Oxford.

Professor Godfried Engbersen


Godfried Engbersen is Research Director and Professor at the Department of Sociology at the Erasmus University
of Rotterdam (EUR). His current research activities focus on irregular migration, the relationship between
restrictive migration regimes and crime, transnational citizenship, and labour migration from Central and Eastern
Europe. Recent publications include: ‘Local limits to migration control: practices of selective migration policing in a
restrictive national policy context’, Police Quarterly (with A. Leerkes & M. Varsanyi, 2012); ‘On the differential
attachments of migrants from Central and Eastern Europe: a typology of labour migration’, Journal of Ethnic and
Migration Studies (with others, 2013); and ‘How social media transform migrant networks and facilitate
migration’, Global Networks. A Journal of Transnational Affairs (with R. Dekker, forthcoming), Professor
Engbersen is the Dutch correspondent for the continuous Reporting System on Migration (SOPEMI) of the OECD
and an elected member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Sciences (KNAW). He was an elected member of the
Dutch Advisory Commission on Alien Affairs (2001-2009) and chaired the KNAW-committee on the future of
Dutch Sociology (2003-2006).

Professor Thomas Faist


Thomas Faist is Professor of Transnational, Development, and Migration Studies and the Dean of Sociology at the
University of Bielefeld. His current research interests include: migration, citizenship, social policy, and
development. He has published widely in the fields of transnational migration; the causes and consequences of
contemporary immigration; and the volume and dynamics of international migration and transnational social
spaces. His publications include: Transnational Migration (with Fauser, M. and E. Reisenauer 2013); and Beyond a
Border: The Causes and Consequences of Contemporary Immigration (with Kivisto, P. 2010). He has held visiting
professorships at Malmö University and the University of Toronto.

Professor Maria Lucinda Fonseca


Maria Lucinda Fonseca is the Dean of the Institute of Geography and Spatial Planning at the University of Lisbon
(IGOT-ULisboa). She is the coordinator of the ‘Migration, cities, and minorities’ research unit at the University of
Lisbon’s Centre for Geographical Studies. Her research interests include: population mobility, international
migration, comparative urban social geography, marginalised communities and urban planning policies. Recent
publications include: ‘Modes of inter-ethnic coexistence in three neighbourhoods in the Lisbon Metropolitan Area:
a comparative perspective (Coord. 2012); Guest editor (with J. McGarrigle) of a special issue of the Journal
Finisterra (n. 96, 2013, forthcoming) on Neighbourhood integration in European multi-ethnic cities: evidence
from the GEITONIES project; and Cities in movement: migrants and urban governance (Ed., 2008). Professor
Fonseca has taught at the Universities of Copenhagen, Barcelona, and Geneva. She is a member of the National
Observatory of Immigration and of the International Steering Committee of the International Metropolis Project.
Professor Cindy Horst
Cindy Horst is Research Professor in Migration and Refugee Studies at the Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO).
Her current research interests include: mobility in conflict; diaspora; humanitarianism; refugee protection;
transnational civic engagement; and theorizing on social transformation. She is particularly interested in
methodological innovations that allow for critical and ethically conscious research engagement, through shared
anthropology and multi-sited ethnography. Cindy is the author of Transnational Nomads: How Somalis cope with
refugee life in the Dadaab camps of Kenya (Berghahn 2006). Her most recent publications include: ‘The
depoliticization of diasporas from the Horn of Africa: From refugees to transnational aid workers’, African Studies
(2013); and ‘How does conflict in the country of origin affect remittance-sending? A mixed-method study of
financial priorities and transnational obligations among Somalis and Pakistanis in Norway’, International Migration
Review (with J. Carling and M. Erdal, 2012).

Professor Douglas Massey


Douglas Massey is the Henry G. Bryant Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs at the Woodrow Wilson School of
Public and International Affairs at Princeton University. His research interests focus on concerns for the
consequences of American city segregation for African Americans and Latinos of African ancestry, as well as, more
broadly: international migration, demography, race/ethnic relations, social and economic inequality, Latin American
studies (especially Mexican) and social research methods. His publications include: Brokered Boundaries: Creating
Immigrant Identity in Anti-Immigrant Times (with Magaly Sánchez R. 2010); and Taming the River: Negotiating
the Academic, Financial, and Social Currents in Selective Colleges and Universities (with Charles, C.Z., M.J. Fischer,
and M.A. Mooney. 2009). Professor Massey has served on the faculties of the University of Chicago and the
University of Pennsylvania. He is president of the American Academy of Political and Social Science (AAPSS).

Professor Ewa Morawska


Ewa Morawska is Professor of Sociology at the University of Essex. She is currently working on a project which
compares the functioning of ground-level multiculturalism or everyday inter-group relations in the Fatimid
Alexandria in the late 10th and 11th centuries, Venice in the late 14th and 15th centuries, St. Petersburg in the 18th
century, and Berlin at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries. Her research interests include international
migration, race, and ethnicity in Europe and North America in historical perspective; social change and multiple
modernities; representations and practices of multiculturalism. Her recent publications include: ‘Structuring
Immigrants’ Political Incorporation Into the Receiver Society: Expanded Theoretical Model and Its Empirical
Applications’(2013); ‘Multiculturalism from Below: Reflections of an Immigrant Ethnographer’, (2013); ‘Diaspora
Diasporas’ Imaginations of the Homeland: Exploring the Polymorph’, Ethnic and Racial Studies (2011); ‘Ethnicity as
a Primordial-Situational-Constructed Experience: Different Times, Different Places, Different Constellations’
(2011); and A Sociology of Immigration. (Re)Making Multifaceted America (2009); and International Migration
Research: Constructions, Omissions, and Promises of Interdisciplinarity (co-editor with Michael Bommes, 2005).
Programme

Day 1: Tuesday 24 September 2013 (pm)


Registration
1330-1500 Monson Room

Welcome tea & coffee


1430-1500 Monson Room

Welcome address & introduction to THEMIS


1500-1530 Simpkins Lee Theatre

Keynote I: Emergence and development of migration systems


1530-1700 Simpkins Lee Theatre Discussant: Sara Curran

1 The mobility turn: a new paradigm for the social sciences?


Thomas Faist
2 Does many migrants a migration system make?
Oliver Bakewell

Conference welcome drinks reception


1700-1900 College gardens (Talbot Hall in the case of wet weather)
All conference delegates welcome
Day 2: Wednesday 25 September 2013
Keynote II: Migrants as social actors
0900-1030 Simpkins Lee Theatre Discussant: Ronald Skeldon

3 Changing contexts, changing actors: accounting for migration dynamics


Ewa Morawska
4 Conceptualizing migrants as social actors in migration systems: a view from the periphery
Cindy Horst

Coffee & tea break


1030-1100 Monson Room

Parallel session I (A): Migration systems – Evolution and decline


1100-1230 Simpkins Lee Theatre Chair: Melissa Siegel

5 How does migration start and stop? Revisiting migration systems and cumulative causation
theory
Hein de Haas
6 Developing migration systems in Europe and Asia
Hideki Tarumoto
7 Similar but not equal: the differing evolution of (gendered) migration systems in Moldova and
Georgia
Melissa Siegel, Michaella Vanore
Parallel session I (B): Feedback – Social media
1100-1230 Talbot Hall Chair: Rianne Dekker

8 Worldwide@home: transnational networks in the Digital Age


Maren Borkert
9 Female migration and intergenerational relationships: the use of ICTs by Brazilian migrant
women in the United Kingdom
Tania Tonhati
10 Online feedback in migration systems
Rianne Dekker, Godfried Engbersen
Parallel session I (C): Methodology – Life course and paths
1100-1230 Mary O'Brien Room Chair: Karen O’Reilly

11 Life paths of migrants: a sequence analysis of Polish labour migrants' family-life trajectories
Tom Kleinepier, Helga de Valk, Ruben van Gaalen
12 Following in the footsteps of others? A life-course perspective on mobility trajectories and
migrant networks among Senegalese migrants
Eleonora Castagnone, Sorana Toma
13 Flexible ethnography for practice stories of migration: (elite?) migrants in Asia
Karen O'Reilly, Katherine Botterill, Rob Stones
Parallel session I (D): Social Actors – Families
1100-1230 Old Library Chair: Jennifer Wu

14 Should I stay or should I go? The role of relationships in the decision to migrate, stay, or return:
the Brazilian migrants case study
Ana Paula Figueiredo
15 The transnational family as a socio-legal actor for managing migration processes
Encarnación La Spina
16 The complexity of migration: life-strategies of migrant family members and families
Thomas Geisen

Buffet lunch
1230-1330 Monson Room

Parallel session II (A): Social actors – Aspirations


1330-1500 Simpkins Lee Theatre Chair: Maria Lucinda Fonseca

17 Aspirations as meaningful (and elusive) glimpses into the future of migration: insights from the
narratives of immigrant domestic workers in Italy
Paolo Boccagni
18 Micro level factors leading to a migratory decision: migrant groups in the Czech Republic
Antonin Mikes, Živka Deleva
19 Migration decision making: aspirations and opportunities
Maria Lucinda Fonseca, Sueli Siqueira, Alina Esteves, Jennifer McGarrigle, Sónia Pereira
Parallel session II (B): Methodology – RDS and modelling
1330-1500 Talbot Hall Chair: Rojan Ezzati

20 Assessment of effectiveness of RDS sampling method in migration studies


Joanna Napierala, Agata Gorny
21 Variability and transitions of mobility patterns in migration from Ukraine to Poland
Agata Górny
22 Migration feedback effects in networks: an agent-based model
Miriam Rehm, Asjad Naqvi
23 Respondent-driven sampling as a recruitment method
Rojan Ezzati, Jennifer Wu
Parallel session II (C): Social actors – Families (continued)
1330-1500 Mary O'Brien Room Chair: Anju Paul

24 Children go first! Family strategies and educational migration


Liudmila Kopecka
25 The (changing) role of family among Afghan communities in Britain and Germany
Carolin Fischer
26 Migrant negotiations/negotiating migration: a gendered variation on the new economics of
labour migration
Anju Paul
Parallel session II (D): Feedback – Labour migration
1330-1500 Old Library Chair: Guri Tyldum
27 American migrants in France, Germany, and the United Kingdom: diversity of migration
motivations and patterns
Amanda Klekowski von Koppenfels
28 ‘We feel at home here': Swedish migrants to industrial Pennsylvania 1880-1940 as social
actors in a continuing migration process
Elizabeth Baigent
29 What migration means: recognising the diversity of practices embedded in cultures of
migration
Guri Tyldum

Coffee & tea break


1500-1530 Monson Room

Parallel session III (A): Migration systems – Return


1530-1700 Simpkins Lee Theatre Chair: Cindy Horst
30 Mixed return migration: the case of the Finnish and Swedish migration system
Östen Wahlbeck
31 Back to square one: socio-economic integration of deported migrants in North Africa
Anda David
32 Return migration and the development of migration systems: the end of a cycle or a new
beginning?
Sonia Pereira, Sueli Siqueira
Parallel session III (B): Feedback – Intersections with policy
1530-1700 Talbot Hall Chair: Simona Vezzoli

33 Guyanese migration since independence: migration policies, migrant networks, and postcolonial
ties
Simona Vezzoli
34 The impact of sending states’ transnational policies on migration dynamics: a comparative
analysis of South American cases
Ana Margheritis
35 Mediating migration: the role of the Qiaoban (the Office of Overseas Chinese Affairs) in the
rescaling of the Wenzhou region in China
Ya-Han Chuang
Parallel session III (C): Social actors – Shaping systems
1530-1700 Mary O'Brien Room Chair: Sorana Toma
36 To move or not to move (when one arguably has the social capital): the mediating effect of
migrant family networks on migration aspirations and planned and unplanned Mexico - U.S.
migration
Fernando Riosmena, Mathew Creighton
37 The role of both migrants and institutions in an enduring pattern of migration: the case of
Almeria, a province of Spain which acts as a stage for undocumented migrants to pursue
regularisation papers
Pauline Carnet
38 Does migration from Colombia to the United Kingdom constitute a migration system?
Exploring the role of migrant agency and structural factors
Anastasia Bermudez
Parallel session III (D): Migration systems – Dynamics
1530-1700 Old Library Chair: Hein de Haas

39 Migrants' expected time of residence in receiving countries: a systems approach


Jack DeWaard, Guy Abel
40 Stuck in transit: the Dublin regulation, national discrepancies, and secondary migration of
asylum seekers in Europe
Jan-Paul Brekke, Grete Brochmann
41 Migration system dynamics: evidence from global data
Mathias Czaika, Hein de Haas

Conference dinner drinks reception


1800-1900 College gardens (Talbot Hall in the case of wet weather)
The conference dinner drinks reception is for delegates who have booked the dinner option. These delegates
should have received a conference dinner pass with their delegate pack. Formal dress is not required.

Conference dinner
1900-2200 Deneke Dining Hall
The conference dinner is for delegates who have booked the dinner option. These delegates should have received
a conference dinner pass with their delegate pack. Formal dress is not required.
Live music by the Jazz Collective
Day 3: Thursday 26 September
Keynote plenary: Feedback processes in migration
0900-1030 Simpkins Lee Theatre Discussant: Hein de Haas

42 Policy feedbacks and their influence on the evolution of the North American migration system
Douglas Massey
43 Networks and beyond: feedback channels and the diminutive causation of international migration
Godfried Engbersen

Coffee & tea break


1030-1100 Monson Room

Parallel session IV (A) – Social actors: Class


1100-1230 Simpkins Lee Theatre Chair: Sonia Pereira

44 Revisiting migration and class


Nick Van Hear
45 A matter of class? The dynamics of Brazilian migration to Europe
Cindy Horst, Agnieszka Kubal, Sonia Pereira
46 Agency and migrants in the labour market: social actors or submissive players?
Sonia Pereira
Parallel session IV (B): Migration systems – Role of policies
1100-1230 Talbot Hall Chair: Dominique Jolivet

47 Challenging the borders of intimacy and legality: migrant agency in response to Danish
restrictions on transnational marriage
Tess Hellgren
48 Changing migration opportunity structures of Roma and their hosting societies: the case of
Belgium
Johan Wets, Heleen Touquet
49 The effect of local transformations on migration aspirations in Brazil, Morocco, and Ukraine
Dominique Jolivet
Parallel session IV (C): Social actors – Conflict and constraint
1100-1230 Mary O'Brien Room Chair: Gabriele Tomei

50 What kind of asylum and which destination? Afghan asylum seekers transiting from Greece
Angeliki Dimitriadi
51 Violence, surveillance and agency experiences of the women refugees in the Italian reception
camps
Barbara Pinelli
52 Remaining subjects despite structural constraints: migratory strategies among refugees hosted in
Italy after their expulsion from Libya
Gabriele Tomei
Parallel session IV (D) – Feedback: Institutions
1100-1230 Old Library Chair: Saara Koikkalainen
53 ‘How to get into London?’: the role played by travel agencies to move Brazilian migrants to the
UK
Gustavo Dias
54 Do institutions play a role in skilled migration? The case of Italy
Annamaria Nifo, Gaetano Vecchione
55 New immigrant groups, integration and forms of citizenship in the global city: the case of Latin
Americans in Europe
Fabiola Pardo Noteboom
56 Highly skilled migrants and the European mobility industry
Saara Koikkalainen
Parallel session IV (E): Social actors – Networks
1100-1230 Jerwood Room Chair: Naluwembe Binaisa
57 From post-socialist to post-accession pioneering: the shaping of Romanian migration networks
to Spain and the United Kingdom
Chris Moreh
58 Strong ties, weak ties and protection for domestic workers: Ethiopian domestic worker migration
to the Middle East
Katie Kuschminder

59 The influence of networks in the migration decisions of Kenyan and Nigerian women bound for
the United Kingdom
Linda Oucho

Buffet lunch
1230-1330 Monson Room

Parallel session V (A): Feedback – Intersection with policy (continued)


1330-1500 Simpkins Lee Theatre Chair: Agnieszka Kubal
60 ‘I may not be legal, but I am not a criminal’: the consequences of criminalization of migration for
migrants' everyday lives in Europe
Agnieszka Kubal
61 Trasnational families and state-services provision in the communities of origin
Mariana Gabarrot
62 Emergence, evolution, and dynamic influence of migration systems in northeast Thailand
Sara Curran, Walker Frahm
Parallel session V (B): Feedback – Socio-economic conditions
1330-1500 Talbot Hall Chair: Joaquin Arango
63 The relevance of ‘feedback mechanisms' in migration impacted regions in relation with changing
macro socio-economic contexts: a case study on Moroccan and Turkish emigration regions
Christiane Timmerman, Kenneth Hemmerechts, Helene de clerck, Roos Willems
64 'Se quedó ¿a volver?': crisis, stay, and return in the case of Ecuadorians in Spain
Juan Iglesias
65 'Do as I say, not as I do?': analysing the potential effects of immigrants' representations of the
crisis on migration systems. Insights from a peripheral southern European country
Dora Sampaio, Rui Carvalho
Parallel session V (C): Social actors – Networks
1330-1500 Mary O'Brien Room Chair: Godfried Engbersen

66 Skilled Iranians in Germany and the United States: exploring migrants' networks
Uta Lehmann
67 Migration networks in action: case of Daba Tianeti
Tamar Zurabishvili, Tinatin Zurabishvili
68 Translocal rhythms of gendered care: Latvian women creating lives on the move
Aija Lulle
Parallel session V (D): Migration systems – Capital and business
1330-1500 Old Library Chair: Stephen Castles

69 Migrant networks and the migration process: considering the spatial and temporal dimensions of
social capital
Alexandra Winkels
70 ‘Brain-gain' return of India’s high-skilled entrepreneurs: home, transformation, and power politics
in the cosmopolitan global south
Malasree Neepa Acharya
71 How low-cost credit facilitates and sustains migration systems: evidence from Cambodia
Maryann Bylander
Parallel session V (E): Social actors – Political contexts of action
1330-1500 Jerwood Room Chair: Oliver Bakewell

72 Dis-locating the local: a study of the migrants originating from the Indian enclaves
Sanghita Datta
73 ‘Now smells like revolution': migrants' activism, subjectivities, and agency in contemporary
London
Gabriela Quevedo
74 The ‘Neogramscian approach’: using 'Critical Theories' to explain migration systems
Robert Westermann

Coffee & tea break


1500-1530 Monson Room

Parallel session VI (A): Feedback – Networks


1530-1700 Simpkins Lee Theatre Chair: Erik Snel

75 Mobilising resources in transit: configurations of transnational social networks of African


migrants in Turkey and Greece
Marieke Wissink, Valentina Mazzucato
76 Pulling up the ladder? Migrants' choices about helping others migrate or not
Jørgen Carling, Jennifer Wu
77 From bridgeheads to gate closers: how migrant networks contribute to declining migration from
Morocco to the Netherlands
Erik Snel, Marije Faber, Godfried Engbersen
Parallel session VI (B): Migration systems – Diversity of outcomes
1530-1700 Talbot Hall Chair: Sara Curran

78 Accounting for diversity in Polish migration in Europe: motivation and early integration
Renee Luthra, Justyna Salamonska, Lucinda Platt
79 Understanding new migrations in the enlarged Europe: the new migration system and the
emergence of multi-local inequalities
Anna Amelina
80 Beyond migrant lives: the rise and fall of meso-level actors
Joana Sousa Ribeiro
Parallel session VI (C): Social actors – Settlement
1530-1700 Mary O'Brien Room Chair: Alina Esteves

81 Transformative stages of migrant identity: a diachronic and synchronic study of the first-
generation Romanian migrants in the UK
Oana Romocea
82 Migrants' organisations as identity creators: between integration and segregation. The case of
the Bulgarians in Valladolid, Spain
Alberto Alonso-Ponga García, María Jesús Pena Castro
83 Citizens of Kazakhstan in a Russian city: factors facilitating and limiting transnational activities
(the case of Novosibirsk)
Larisa Kosygina
Parallel session VI (D): Migration systems – Conflict
1530-1700 Old Library Chair: Erlend Paasche

84 Coercion and constraint in cumulative causation: forced migration and feedbacks in post-invasion
Iraq Coercion and constraint in cumulative causation: forced migration and feedbacks in post-
invasion Iraq (and tentative suggestions about cumulative causation in Syria's displacements)
Ali Ali
85 Egypt: migration, revolution, and social change
Philip Marfleet
86 Elites and emulators: the evolution of an Iraqi Kurdish - European migration system
Erlend Paasche
Concluding panel discussion
1700-1800 Simpkins Lee Theatre Maria Lucinda Fonseca

Presenters include Stephen Castles and other THEMIS team


members and guests.
Abstracts

1 The mobility turn: a new paradigm for the social sciences?


Thomas Faist
Bielefeld University, Bielefeld, Germany
Day 1. Tuesday 24 September 2013: Keynote I: Emergence and development of migration systems 1530-1700

A new paradigmatic turn has reached migration studies, the mobility turn. Following upon many turns in the recent
past such as the linguistic turn, the cultural turn, and the spatial turn, the mobility turn seems to be the newest
effort in diagnostic descriptions of modern society. Like other turns, the mobility turn generalizes one aspect of
contemporary society to the detriment of other features. While such a turn may usefully highlight various forms
of spatial mobility, it cannot be fruitfully employed unless the scholars working with this paradigm critically reflect
underlying political assumptions about the nexus between spatial and social mobility. Moreover, any analysis of
spatial and social mobilities needs to go beyond descriptions and start accounting for the mechanisms underlying
the production of social inequalities.
Keywords: Mobility, migration, welfare state, transnationality, social inequality, sedentarism

2 Does many migrants a migration system make?


Oliver Bakewell
IMI, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Day 1. Tuesday 24 September 2013: Keynote I: Emergence and development of migration systems 1530-1700

The idea of the migration system is often invoked when significant levels of migration between localities appear to
become established over a sustained period. In such cases, the metaphor of the system may provide a useful
description of the patterns of movement but does it have any more analytical value or are we seeing nothing more
than the aggregation of individual behaviour? The paper argues for enriching the notion of the migration system
by conceiving it as an emergent social entity that shapes the way migration at one time influences subsequent
movements. It draws on data from the THEMIS project to critically examine the extent to which this theoretical
approach enhances the empirical analysis of migration along three ‘corridors': Ukraine-Portugal, Ukraine-UK and
Brazil-Norway.

3 Changing contexts, changing actors: accounting for migration dynamics


Ewa Morawska
University of Essex, Colchester, UK
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Keynote II: Migrants as social actors 0900-1030

I propose, first, some elaboration of Emirbayer's and Mische's (1998) conceptualization of human agency that has
become a standard reference for present-day structuration and morphogenesis theorists, including migration
scholars inspired by these models. I suggest a distinction between the instrumental- and value-rational evaluative
dimensions of human agency in place of the general ‘practical-evaluative' one; an addition of the ‘aesthetic' aspect
of the agency's evaluative component; and a refinement of the understanding of the term ‘social' that in an un-
reflected upon manner usually accompanies the use of ‘actors' in social-science studies. I then offer some
suggestions regarding the (re-)conceptualization of the role of human actors in different phases of the migration
process: as the pioneers of population flows, in the emergence of migration systems, and in sustaining migration.
My propositions are illustrated with empirical examples drawn from studies of past and present international
migrations.
4 Conceptualising migrants as social actors: reflections from THEMIS
Cindy Horst
Peace Research Institute Oslo, Oslo, Norway
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Keynote II: Migrants as social actors 0900-1030

Agency of migrants is increasingly acknowledged and explored in migration studies, particularly work on
transnationalism. Migration systems theory however, has traditionally had a more deterministic and structural
focus. This paper argues the importance of incorporating a richer analysis of how migrants as social actors
influence and are influenced by migration processes. The analysis is based on nearly 90 in-depth interviews with
Brazilian, Moroccan and Ukrainian migrants in Norway, and 30 in-depth interviews in Brazil, Morocco and Ukraine
with returnees from Norway and family members of migrants in Norway. This allows us to explore opportunities
and challenges of the migration system perspective, and the potential role of migrants as social actors within it.
We ask how useful the migration system perspective is for understanding migration to the periphery of European
migration destinations. The paper argues that migration systems thinking, with its focus on pioneers, feedback and
threshold, only explains certain migration flows while obstructing a better understanding of others.
There are great differences between migrants with relatively easy access to Norway, for example through
connections to Norwegian individuals and companies, and those without. We explore these differences between
'wanted' and 'unwanted' migration streams, moving from more 'systemic' cases to those that migration systems
theory offers less. First, a discussion of Moroccan migration to Norway places this traditionally network-based
migration corridor in a wider European frame. Second, an exploration of the highly diverse marriage migration with
Norwegians shows the differentiating impacts of class for Brazilians (and Ukrainians) in Norway. Third, the large
group of students and professionals in the Ukrainian (and Brazilian) case illuminate the highly individualized
trajectories of Europe's wanted migrants. Theorizing migration dynamics through the lens of systematically
exploring socio-economic differences, allows a richer and more diversified picture of migrants as social actors
within or beyond a systems perspective.

5 How does migration start and stop? Revisiting migration systems and cumulative
causation theory
Hein de Haas
IMI, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session I (A): Migration systems – Evolution and decline 1100-1230

This paper evaluates my earlier critique (cf. de Haas 2010) of the assumption that migration processes become
self-perpetuating in migration systems and migratory cumulative causation theories. I critiqued their inability to
explain why most initial migration moves do not lead to network migration and migration system formation; their
relative ignorance of endogenous and contextual migration-undermining feedback mechanisms that may explain
the endogenous decline of established migration systems; and their lack of critical analysis of the (mixed) role of
social capital in migration processes, emphasising the migration-facilitating (‘bridgehead') role of migrant
networks but largely ignoring the ‘downsides' (cf. Portes 1999) of social capital, which can explain selection,
exclusion (‘gatekeeping') and the non-occurrence or decline of network dynamics. Recently, a number of individual
and collaborative research projects (e.g. MMP, MAFE, THEMIS, DEMIG, EUMAGINE) investigating migration
system dynamics have generated valuable insights that shed a more empirical light on these issues and test
theory-derived hypotheses. Drawing on these emerging empirical insights, this paper will revisit migration
systems and cumulative causation theories with regard to the migration-facilitating and migration-undermining
feedback mechanisms at play in the various trajectories and stages of migration system formation and decline.
This paper will particularly focus on the fundamentally ambiguous role of networks in sustaining or undermining
migration by providing selective access to or exclusion from ‘migration assistance' as well as conveying positive or
negative information about opportunities in origin and potential destination countries; and how these meso-level
migration system dynamics interact with state policies in sending and receiving countries.
6 Developing migration systems in Europe and Asia
Hideki Tarumoto1,2
1
Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan, 2Sciences Po, Paris, France
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session I (A): Migration systems – Evolution and decline 1100-1230

As globalisation is accelerated in twenty-first century, surely migration systems have been emergent and
developed in the globe. But, it is still ambiguous what differences migration systems hold and through what
mechanism they appear. Among various factors and actors, we cannot ignore the role of the state. In one aspect,
the state seems to be an inhibitor against emergence of migration systems. Not only Western countries but also
non-Western countries are struggling to handle massive international migration and to reconcile social issues
appearing from it. But in the other aspect, the state takes a role of facilitator for migration systems. It tends to
select migrants who can enter and/or stay in the society. What differences of migration systems does the state
create? What mechanism does it produce, with relating to the other state, social groups, migrants and the
society? To these questions, this paper will take two approaches. Firstly, we should examine not only Western
countries but also non-Western countries. With comparison to Western world, much less research has explored
situations of migration in non-Western world. Asia is not an exception, although it has been remarkably shifting to
multicultural societies. So, we will undertake comparative study of Europe and East Asia, such as Japan, South
Korea and Taiwan, to examine differences and factors of migration systems. Secondly, some theoretical
perspective is needed to examine the questions. One theoretical key concept is citizenship. To create or limit
migration systems, the state utilises citizenship of migrants composed of status, rights and duties, and identity.
Then, with reference to a theoretical model called the Hammar=Koido=Tarumoto model (the HKT model), we will
approach mechanisms of development of migration systems. This exploration will lead us to comprehensive
understanding emergence and development of migration systems which has been evolving all over the world.

7 Similar but not equal: the differing evolution of (gendered) migration systems in Moldova
and Georgia
Melissa Siegel1,2, Michaella Vanore1,2
1
Maastricht University, Maastricht, The Netherlands, 2United Nations University-MERIT, Maastricht, The
Netherlands
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session I (A): Migration systems – Evolution and decline 1100-1230

This paper comparatively examines the evolution of migration systems in Moldova and Georgia, focusing on the
changing gender patterns of migration and the different paths each country has taken regarding female migration.
While large-scale migration from both countries can be traced to the end of the Soviet period, important
differences in the post-Soviet social, political, and economic transitions experienced by each country have
resulted in unique migration patterns. In reviewing the beginnings, development, and sustained importance of
migration systems in Moldova and Georgia, this paper documents how changing economic needs and
opportunities coupled with evolving political relationships with neighbouring countries have moulded gendered
migration processes in each country. Using household survey data collected from 2011-2013 in Moldova and
Georgia, this paper finds that political and economic relationships with Russia and the EU are critical determinants
of gendered migration patterns in both Moldova and Georgia. Recent shifts in migration patterns reflect changes
to the quality and substance of these relationships over time: while migration of low- and medium-skilled male
workers has continued relatively unabated from Moldova to Russia, the antagonistic political relationship between
Georgia and Russia has stymied the flow of male labour migrants from Georgia to the countries in the
Commonwealth of Independent States. Such evolving dynamics are important to understand for both Moldova
and Georgia, which have experienced the loss of 25 per cent of their populations to migration over the past two
decades.

8 Worldwide@home: transnational networks in the Digital Age


Maren Borkert
Department of Development Studies, Vienna, Austria
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session I (B): Feedback – Social media 1100-1230

In the almost 20 years of existence transnational studies have focused on a variety of topics and social
phenomena (Faist 2000, Levitt 1998, Levitt & Glick-Schiller 2004, Pries 1999 and 2010, Vertovec 2004).
Different perspectives on the nexus between transnationalism and migrants networks have emerged that have,
on the one hand, led to the diffusion and rapid establishment of transnationalisation as a genuine field of study and
approach. On the other hand, transnational concepts have become catch-all phrases for cross-border ties and
have been seen as equivalent to such different processes as globalisation, de-nationalisation, de-materialisation,
virtualisation or the ‘liquidation' of social relations. While some might mourn the unspecific use of the term, others
add to its uncertainty with claims regarding the far-reaching consequences of transnationalisation without
providing substantial empirical evidence.
To better understand processes of transnationalisation and shed a fresh light on the emergence, ‘solidification' and
breakup of migration networks, this paper explores the role that modern Information and Communication
Technologies (ICTs) play in how migrants maintain exchange relationships over long distances and across nation
states. Special emphasis is put on the question how virtual networks affect (offline) migration behaviour and how
they impact on the countries of origin and destination. Here, the assumption that strong cross-border
transnational ties result in making social contacts in residential areas/cities grow weak (Levitt 1998, Levitt &
Glick-Schiller 2004, Pries 2001, 2008 and 2010), is put to the test. Empirical evidence is drawn from more than
150 questionnaires and 30 qualitative interviews conducted by bachelor students of the Department of
Development Studies at the University of Vienna.

9 Female migration and intergenerational relationships: the use of ICTs by Brazilian migrant
women in the United Kingdom
Tania Tonhati1,2
1
Goldsmiths College, London, UK, 2Geb- Brazilian Migration to the UK Research Group, London, UK
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session I (B): Feedback – Social media 1100-1230

This presentation aims to reflect on how the use of ICTs has reshaped the experience of Brazilian pioneer women
in the United Kingdom and their relationship with their parents in Brazil. The literature on Brazilian migration
argues that the second wave, initiated in the mid-90s onwards, was the period when women began to leave the
country in search for employment, study and career improvement (Assis 2007, Padilla 2007). This paper argues
that in the case of the United Kingdom, the migration of Brazilian women had also begun in the 1980s. Thus,
Brazilian women moving to the UK should not be seen as followers of male migrants. They were active in the
construction of the network effect. Therefore, I present that Brazilian female migration should be seen as a wide
phenomenon in which women no longer stay at home and men are no longer the main breadwinner.
There is an increase in individualization and women are searching for ‘a life of their own’ in which elements such as
education and employment have strongly become part of women's biography (Beck-Gernsheim 2002). Beyond
these general social trends, female migration has a consequence for traditional family practices such as care for
elderly parents. Therefore, Brazilian pioneer women are now facing intergenerational expectation to care for their
elderly parents. In this context, ICTs play a role in reconciling women's search for a ‘life of their own’ and their
intergenerational obligation. Throughout my fieldwork I have observed that the use of ICTs has allowed the
continuation of family relationships and the creation of everyday family practices even at a distance. Nevertheless,
they have also affected emotional feelings with regards to family relationships. Thus, the use of ICTs cannot be
only analysed as minimising the effects of migration. Their use also creates ambiguous feelings in the migrant
about their migration trajectory.

10 Online feedback in migration systems


Rianne Dekker, Godfried Engbersen
Erasmus University, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session I (B): Feedback – Social media 1100-1230

Online media allow for transnational communication in migration systems that does not only directly affect non-
migrants who are embedded in migration networks, but also possibly affects a broader community as a channel of
indirect feedback. This paper studies the effect of transnational exchange of information via online media on
migration processes. We take a migration systems approach and consider both the information sending-
perspective of migrants in destination countries as well as the information consuming-perspective of non-
migrants in popular origin localities of migration in Western Europe. Our results show that online media have
become rather important channels of communication. Online feedback sending and -receiving behaviour can be
explained by personal characteristics as well as migration characteristics. Origin country proves to be an important
predictor. Online feedback is in most cases direct feedback to existing social ties but may also concern indirect
feedback concerning latent ties. Receiving online feedback correlates significantly with non-migrants' self-
perceived migration likeliness, indicating that online feedback indeed affects subsequent migration. This does not
always lead to more migration movements because online feedback may also be negative and migration-
undermining.

11 Life paths of migrants: a sequence analysis of Polish labour migrants' family-life


trajectories
Tom Kleinepier1, Helga de Valk1,2, Ruben van Gaalen3
1
Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute (NIDI), The Hague, The Netherlands, 2Vrije Universiteit
Brussel, Brussels, The Netherlands, 3Statistics Netherlands, The Hague, The Netherlands
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session I (C): Methodology – Life course and paths 1100-1230

Polish migration to the Netherlands has increased substantially over the past decade and is one of the main origins
of migrants settling in the country nowadays. Nevertheless, still little is known on how migration affects the lives
of these migrants in the family domain and what decisions are made by these migrants. In this study, we use
register data from Statistics Netherlands to examine to what extent migration affects the timing (“when”) and
sequencing (‘in what order’) of family-life transitions. The majority of studies on family-life transitions of migrants
exclusively focus on one transition only, which is unfortunate as different events in the life course are not separate
experiences but are linked to one another. Therefore, we apply a more holistic approach by using sequence
analysis. More specifically, we apply optimal matching (OM) analysis to assess (dis-)similarities between individual
life trajectories. We then use standard clustering algorithms to group the different individuals into predominant life
paths. In this way we can include multiple transitions in the family domain (union formation, marriage, childbirth,
divorce) simultaneously and study life courses as meaningful units. We will investigate the relationship between
these trajectories to both migration and return migration. Our analyses focus on young adult Polish labour
migrants from two birth cohorts (aged 22 and 26 at migration) who came to the Netherlands in 2004. Data come
from a rich individual administrative panel database that covers the entire population of the Netherlands: the
Social Statistical Database (SSD) housed by Statistics Netherlands. Data are available for the period 2004-2011
and include detailed information on the place of residence in the Netherlands. The latter allows us to assess the
relative importance of the neighbourhood and the potential effects of the ethnic network on life paths.

12 Following in the footsteps of others? A life-course perspective on migrant networks and


mobility trajectories among Senegalese migrants
Eleonora Castagnone1, Sorana Toma2
1
FIERI, Turin, Italy, 2University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session I (C): Methodology – Life course and paths 1100-1230

International migration is still mainly analysed as a one-time, one-way movement from an origin country A to a
permanent destination B. Yet migration trajectories are often more complex, as migrants may travel through and
successively settle in several countries, or engage in circular mobility. However, the factors that shape individuals’
migration trajectories remain little known. In particular, secondary intra-European migration is still an under-
researched area, despite the fact that qualitative studies suggest that secondary movements have become a
common mobility strategy (Schapendonk 2010; Paul 2012) increasingly adopted in times of crisis (Sacchetto &
Vianello, 2012; Cingolani & Ricucci, 2013). Taking Senegalese migration flows as a case study; this paper
characterizes the diversity of migration trajectories and explores the drivers that shape them. In particular, it
focuses on secondary migration paths within Europe and the role migrant networks play in this form of mobility.
We use quantitative, longitudinal data recently collected within the framework of the Migration between Africa
and Europe (MAFE) survey. Using sequence and optimal matching analysis, four main patterns of international
mobility from Senegal are identified: linear or direct mobility, secondary migration within Europe, stepwise
migration from Africa to Europe, and circular migration. Furthermore, preliminary results suggest that intra-
European secondary mobility takes place mainly within the first few years of arrival in Europe and is motivated, to
a larger extent then first migration, by work reasons or a desire for discovery. However, the unemployed do not
re-migrate more than those who have a job; rather, the decision to re-settle is associated with a desire to
improve one’s occupational status, and is taken more by the self-employed and the entrepreneurs. Also, social ties
in other European countries play a substantial and significant role in triggering re-migration. Especially important
are weaker ties - such as friends, extended family members or acquaintances – and migrants having recently
moved to Europe. In contrast, close family ties at destination decrease the likelihood of re-settling in another
country. Thus, the paper emphasizes the more complex ways in which migrant networks influence mobility, and
the importance of distinguishing between various types of ties.

13 Flexible ethnography for practice stories of migration: (elite?) migrants in Asia


Karen O'Reilly1, Katherine Botterill1,2, Rob Stones1,3
1
Loughborough University, Loughborough, UK, 2Newcastle University, Newcastle, UK, 3University of Western
Sydney, Sydney, Australia
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session I (C): Methodology – Life course and paths 1100-1230

In contemporary migration research, the dynamics of migration systems and the processes that sustain them have
been explained through a narrow focus on origin and destination. Increasingly, however, scholars recognise the
importance of historical, social and cultural conditions of movement, institutional frameworks and interactions,
individual agency and everyday practices in their analysis of migration patterns and processes. Any focus on a
single aspect of the above leads to calls for more attention to other aspects. We argue that structural and agentic
processes are always and continually interlinked through the practice of daily life and that the goal should be to tell
practice stories of migration (O’Reilly 2012), using practice theory as a meta-theoretical framework. This is,
nevertheless, a tall order for researchers, raising new methodological challenges.
Drawing on our experiences of researching lifestyle migrants in Thailand and Malaysia we consider the merits of
utilising a ‘flexible ethnography’ that learns from and through the mobile, the virtual and the place-based,
recognising the changing nature of migrant lives. Lifestyle migrants in Thailand and Malaysia occupy a relatively
privileged position in global migration hierarchies, a status shaped by historical conditions and social reproduction.
An understanding of their migration involves analysis of macro, micro and network factors as they interact and re-
emerge in the practice of daily life. This research is informed by ethnographic methodology, recognising that
everyday practices are acted out in the context of constraints that migrants themselves reproduce, create and
shape. However, ethnography traditionally involves a long-term commitment, and has tended to be place specific.
A flexible ethnography approach integrates traditional methods with virtual, mobile, multi-sited, and digital
methods to produce practice stories of migration.

14 Should I stay or should I go? The role of relationships in the decision to migrate, stay, or
return: the Brazilian migrants case study
Ana Paula Figueiredo
University of Manchester, Manchester, UK
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session I (D): Social Actors – Families 1100-1230

Despite an estimated number of over 200.000 Brazilians in London, there is no comprehensive research on their
experience in the capital. This paper explores the various factors that affect the choice by Brazilians to migrate to
and stay in London or to return to Brazil. Based on eighty interviews with Brazilians in London and eight months
fieldwork with Brazilians women who work as cleaners in London, this research explores the importance of loving
relationships on the decision making process of Brazilian migrants in London. The combination quantitative and
qualitative methods of research made it possible to uncover how the breakup of a long term relationship, death of
a loved one, new love found on the internet or simply the hope to find love have more influence than studies of
migration have previously accounted for. This case study analysis contributes to the understanding of the
complexities of human agency and network formation in the context of migration and will thereby contribute to
fill gaps in research on Brazilian migration in London.

15 The transnational family as a socio-legal actor for managing migration processes


Encarnación La Spina
University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session I (D): Social Actors – Families 1100-1230

The transnationalism applied to the migratory movements, is based on the fact that migrant population holds
multiple household, economic, social, organizational, religious and political relations that surpass borders, hence
simultaneously two or more societies. The paper is focused on the transnational family as a significant actor in
migration processes due to its notorious contribution to ongoing legal transformations in both societies. However,
the family model in immigration law has an ideal and dominant approach openly excluding other family realities in
the social context. The legal configuration of kinship ties in immigration law is governed by a restrictive logic that
combines a dependent and nuclear composition with mismatches in the concrete form of managing the distances,
the dynamics and the times at origin and destination. Thus, the study explores possible changes and emergent
needs of the transnational family and its integration. These changes are not only for the recognized disintegrative
effects involved, but also for the necessary and diverse legal (re)integrations associated in the home and host
society presented by the current European immigration law. Because law in an inherent tendency towards the
ideal doesn't allow a legitimate choice between autonomy and individual freedom in order to define or not the
family project and it doesn't secure integration in a suitable degree of equality and justice.

16 The complexity of migration: life-strategies of migrant family members and families


Thomas Geisen
University of Applied Sciences Northwestern Switzerland, School of Social Work, Olten, Switzerland
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session I (D): Social Actors – Families 1100-1230

In migration research the concepts of network and transnationalism gained new insights on migrants as social
actors. Most important was that decision-making and balancing processes became bound back to the individual
and its network-relations. In this course a new emphasis was given to the relevance of the migrant family as an
important social actor in migration processes. For transnationalism the family is the most important social unit,
which binds individuals together in an intergenerational social context, often over long geographical distances. It
seems that the family has become the most emblematic social form of transnationalism. However, looking at
concrete family practices it can be shown, that the family itself is embedded into wider social relations build within
the community or the society. Based on own empirical research on migrant families, the proposed paper wants do
develop a conceptual approach for migration research which is centred on migrants as social actors. Here
migration is understood in a wider perspective as a change in residence beyond communal borders. Starting with
such a perspective not only different forms of migration can be identified in a biographical or life-course
perspective. It can be shown as well what relevance the experience of migration and mobility has for individual and
collective actors, what motifs are relevant for migrants in intergenerational and interactional perspective, and
what individual and collective motifs and orientations lead migrants and migrant families to migrate? Under such a
process-perspective of migration, the still existing cleavage in migration research between international and
internal migration shows its limitations for understanding migrants and their families. Based on Norbert Elias
concept of figuration and on Ernest Jouhys concept of social relations, the proposed paper seeks to discuss the
complexity of migration by introducing the concept of live-strategies to enrich the understanding of migration
networks and dynamics by discussing the decisive relevance of the 'subjective factor' for understanding the
migration of family members and migrant families.

17 Aspirations as meaningful (and elusive) glimpses into the future of migration: insights
from the narratives of immigrant domestic workers in Italy
Paolo Boccagni
University of Trento, Trento, Italy
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session II (A): Social actors – Aspirations 1330-1500

My paper aims to contribute to the debate on migrants' potential to shape their life courses, including the
implications of an agential focus on the formation of migration systems. It critically revisits the notion of
aspirations, as relevant to the life stories of over 220 immigrant domestic workers interviewed in Italy between
2005 and 2007. Aspirations are interrogated as a situated, relational and experience-based display of one's
representations of, and desires for, the future. Migrants' purposeful constructions of their future, as individuals
and members of families and broader communities, are a promising and under-examined issue for analysis. Apart
from being inherently mutable, such constructions face ‘reality checks' which may make them elusive and open up
to unintended social consequences (including the systematic postponement or ‘displacement' of their initial
migration aims). "What" migrants reportedly aspired then, while leaving home, may significantly differ from what
they do aspire now - a revealing disjuncture, which will be at the core of my secondary analysis. Interestingly, the
evolution of their ambivalent stances towards the future - apart from reflecting their distinctive backgrounds - is
much telling of the way(s) they try to negotiate across their local and transnational life milieus. How is it that
migrants' views and constructions of the (desired) future impinge on their life trajectories? How, in turn, are such
views and constructions transformed over time, and what does this suggest on their life prospects and on the
relevance of ‘aspiration’ as a sociological lens on their lives?
18 Micro level factors leading to a migratory decision: migrant groups in the Czech Republic
Antonin Mikes1, Živka Deleva2
1
Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic, 2Previously of Comenius University, Bratislava, Slovakia
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session II (A): Social actors – Aspirations 1330-1500

This paper combines the results of research targeting several distinct migrant communities living and working in
the Czech Republic. This research further develops work which documented the experience of highly educated
Slovak workers in the Czech Republic by including additional linguistic groups. Preliminary findings uncovered a
nuanced perspective which elucidated the tendency of young individuals to seek out opportunities in the 'near
abroad' whereas experienced workers became migrants only after ensuring the economic benefits of making a
move. Further work encompassing a larger cohort has indicated that Individual agency plays a key role in individual
decision making. The project has elucidated the complexity of micro level causal factors in relation to migratory
decision making. While this work demonstrates that a network effect exists in some cases rational choice and
cultural commonalities also play a significant role leading up to migration and indeed in perpetuating flows. It has
also become clear that some groups are intent on settlement in the Czech Republic.

19 Migration decision making: aspirations and opportunities


Maria Lucinda Fonseca1, Sueli Siqueira1, Alina Esteves1, Jennifer McGarrigle1, Sónia Pereira1
1
Institute of Geography and Spatial Planning, Lisbon, Portugal, 2Universidade Vale do Rio Doce, Governador
Valadares, Minas Gerais, Brazil
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session II (A): Social actors – Aspirations 1330-1500

The determinants of migration have been long debated in the literature from economic, demographic and socio-
political factors in both sending and receiving regions to migration systems. In the context of complex processes
of social and economic transformation at the global level, this paper seeks to privilege the migrants' perspective at
a very micro level and builds on the acknowledgment of migrants' agency in migration processes. Following a
conceptual framework at the level of the individual and the household, centred on the notions of ‘aspirations’ and
"capabilities" to migrate (de Haas, 2011; Carling, 2002), we will explore the reasons why some people move and
others stay. By drawing on quantitative data obtained through a survey and interviews conducted with members
of migrants' families and non-migrant families in Brazil, within the ambit of the THEMIS project, as well as key
indicators of structural macro and meso-level conditions, collected from secondary sources, this paper seeks to
explore the links between aspirations and opportunities at the individual level, migration networks and as more
structural, macro-level determinants (e.g. employment structures, access to education, health and social rights,
migration regulations, security conditions). In other words, we will explore, in two different regions in Brazil, how
migration aspirations are formed and realized by analysing the significance of individual determinants and
opportunity structures using logistic regression modelling. This analysis aims to increase our understanding of the
initiation of the migration process which is relevant from a developmental perspective.

20 Assessment of effectiveness of RDS sampling method in migration studies


Joanna Napierala, Agata Gorny
Centre of Migration Research, University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session II (A): Social actors – Aspirations 1330-1500

Although, as in comparison to previous decades, people have nowadays more mobility facilitators, the use of
migration networks in the migration process is still undeniable as people are socially networked no matter their
place of stay. The Respondent Driven Sampling (RDS) is a sampling method based on networks, whereby members
of a social group under the study refer other members of their own network as the next study participants. In RDS
we are following the respondents recruitment process which could be compared to a random walk through the
migration network, and as we collect the information on both the structure of the respondents’ networks and the
characteristics of their members this advantages us to research the migrant population more profoundly and to
some extent research also the migration process itself i.e. differential recruitment, homophily.
The goal of our paper is to examine the effectiveness of the method, based on a network sampling, as compared
to quota sampling. We hypothesise that RDS is far more effective, than quota sampling method, and reliable while
searching sensitive matters such as legal status of migrants, remittances and others. In this paper we would like to
also make an attempt to answer the research question whether RDS sample differ systematically from other
samples, such as quota samples. Data sources to be used in this paper are quantitative data collected in two
surveys on migrants from Ukraine, Belarus and Russia living in greater area of Warsaw in 2012 – one with use of
quota sampling and the other with the RDS.

21 Variability and transitions of mobility patterns in migration from Ukraine to Poland


Agata Górny
Centre of Migration Research, University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session II (A): Social actors – Aspirations 1330-1500

Paper addresses the issues of duration and timing as well as variability and transitions in circular migration
constituting an important type of mobility in various national contexts. These issues are studied, with the use of
longitudinal perspective, on the example of Ukrainian migration to Poland - a new immigration country where
established migrant communities are still absent and where temporary migration constitutes the main type of
inflow. Preliminary results demonstrate that, though some changes in mobility patterns of Ukrainians can be
observed, transitions from temporary to settlement migration constitute limited if not marginal phenomenon
which agrees with the conviction formulated already in the literature that circular mobility usually has a different
logic than permanent migration. At the same time, however, detailed examination of mobility patterns of Ukrainian
migrants suggests flexibility of temporary migrants in adjusting to dynamically changing opportunity structures
(mainly with regard to the labour market and legal regulations) in Poland in the 1990s and 2000s.

22 Migration feedback effects in networks: an agent-based model


Miriam Rehm1, Asjad Naqvi2
1
Chamber of Labour, Vienna, Austria, 2Center for Economic Research in Pakistan, Lahore, Pakistan
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session II (A): Social actors – Aspirations 1330-1500

This paper develops a computational network model of migration. The importance of ties between family
members and friends in migration has been long recognised by other social sciences and is increasingly confirmed
by econometric studies. The paper presents a micro simulation of an economy in which the heterogeneous
population moves between three locations, a rural and urban location of origin, and the destination. The key
elements in (return) migration decisions are network feedback effects and income opportunities. The simulations
generate stable patterns and detailed information on distributions, which reproduce available data for the
geographical population distribution, wealth, and remittances. The model generates the clustering of migrants
both at the origin and at the destination that is one of the most pervasive and resilient stylized facts of migration
research.

23 Respondent-driven sampling as a recruitment method


Rojan Ezzati, Jennifer Wu
PRIO, Oslo, Norway
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session II (A): Social actors – Aspirations 1330-1500

Respondent-Driven Sampling (RDS) is a peer-to-peer sampling method similar to snowball sampling, but with a
mathematical model that weights the sample to compensate for biases in such recruitment. In this paper we focus
on the recruitment side of the method, describing how we used RDS in our data collection among Brazilian and
Ukrainian migrants residing in Oslo, Norway. The peer-to-peer recruitment approach of RDS helped us succeed in
reaching our target sample size in the Ukrainian case, but not the Brazilian. In this paper we explore possible
reasons for this. First, our two cases demonstrate that the target population size is not determinative of the
failure or success of RDS, as the Brazilian and Ukrainian populations in Norway are roughly the same size. Nor does
it appear that the social network size of the initial individuals selected to get recruitment started played a role. In
our data collection, we detected considerable concerns regarding stereotypes within the Brazilian community.
Hence we question whether alternative incentives to the monetary ones we offered for participation and
recruitment (as part of the RDS procedure), would have provided us with better results. Furthermore, we find
that our questionnaire-based interviews were longer with Brazilians than with the Ukrainians. Given that RDS
relies so heavily on the recruiters' accounts of their experiences to potential recruits, it is highly vulnerable to any
negative experiences. Finally, how different populations respond to RDS design varies from one case to another. In
the Brazilian case, we found that the need for respondents to recruit others following the required RDS
procedures was perceived as a burden, which impeded further recruitment.
24 Children go first! Family strategies and educational migration
Liudmila Kopecka
Charles University in Prague, Prague, Czech Republic
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session II (C): Social actors – Families (continued) 1330-1500

Recent developments in migration studies have shown that is very important to pay attention to how migration
decisions are taken collectively. Families and kin group play a significant role in the process of migration and
influence individual’s behaviour. However, there have been only a few studies, which focus on family strategies
and migration for educational purposes. This paper attempts to show what kind of role does family play in student
migration from Russia to the Czech Republic and what kind of transnational strategies and migration projects do
have parents, sending their children abroad. The field research for this article was conducted in a few cities in
Russia and in Prague, in the Czech Republic, involving in-depth interviews with student migrants and their parents.

25 The (changing) role of family among Afghan communities in Britain and Germany
Carolin Fischer
University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session II (C): Social actors – Families (continued) 1330-1500

This paper explores how Afghan families shape migration from Afghanistan and processes of settlement and
community formation at European destinations. Social relationships based on family and tribal ties are sources of
solidarity and make mutual assistance an imperative. How these attributes of Afghan families are maintained or
re-shaped through migration and settlement in western countries has not been explicitly addressed. Focusing on
the lives of Afghans in Britain and Germany I examine the reconfiguration of families and agency of family
members, taking into account structural conditions enforced in the receiving society. I conducted a series of in-
depth interviews with people who left Afghanistan at different stages during the last four decades and now live in
Britain or Germany. The interview transcripts contain large segments on personal stories and explicitly address
experiences of migration and settlement in the two destination countries. Afghan families play important roles at
various stages of migration and settlement processes. They are key factors for peoples’ decision to migrate and
inform choices of destination countries and places of residence. Families also influence social interaction and shape
processes of community formation in countries of residence. However, newly emerging patterns of solidarity and
community organization among Afghans in Britain and Germany suggest that dynamic reconfigurations occur in
conjunction with peoples’ lives in receiving societies while core attributes of families are being maintained. Such
reconfigurations primarily occur as a result of differences between first and second- generation immigrants. When
aiming to unpack how structural environments in Britain and Germany enhance peoples’ ability to exercise agency
and choice, the challenge is to disentangle how changing scopes of agency affect family ties as a mode of social
integration.

26 Migrant negotiations/negotiating migration: a gendered variation on the new economics


of labour migration
Anju Paul
Yale-NUS College, Singapore, Singapore
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session II (C): Social actors – Families (continued) 1330-1500

The new economics of labour migration theory has been frequently criticized for ignoring the gendered social
norms and inequitable intra-household power distribution that make it difficult for prospective independent
female labour migrants to leave their homes to work overseas. And yet increasing numbers of independent
women labour migrants leave countries in the Global South every year. Interviews with 142 Filipina migrant
domestic workers located in Singapore, Hong Kong, the Philippines, Canada, and the United States, reveal that
prospective female migrants initially develop an individual-level aspiration to migrate and then have to negotiate
with family members to secure these relatives' support for their migration decision. They win their family's
approval by agentically manipulating gendered scripts in Philippine society. A multilevel model of the migration
decision-making process that distinguishes between migration aspirations and migration negotiations is proposed
to incorporate these findings.
27 American migrants in France, Germany, and the United Kingdom: diversity of migration
motivations and patterns
Amanda Klekowski von Koppenfels
University of Kent at Brussels, Brussels, Belgium
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session II (D): Feedback – Labour migration 1330-1500

Migration between two countries, or localities within those countries, is usually examined only uni-directionally
(although return migration may, often in a context of transnationalism, be taken into account). Examining the
less-studied half of such a migration dyad can help us to understand more clearly the ways in which migration
feedback processes function. This paper considers the case of Americans in France, Germany and the United
Kingdom, three key receiving countries for American migrants (estimated at 2.2 to 6.8 million worldwide), and will
examine the role of networks and interactions, broadly defined, which have played a role in leading these
Americans to migrate. To do so, it will draw on 115 semi-structured in-depth interviews carried out in London,
Paris and Berlin in 2011, as well as upon 450 survey responses from France, Germany and the UK.
These data will be analysed with respect to factors leading to migration, exploring what role a range of
interactions and networks have played in migration. These include professional, educational, state-organized and a
wide variety of personal networks (including nationals of France, Germany and the UK) - a far broader range than
is usually considered. The dualism of temporary versus permanent migration will also be questioned; the paper will
suggest that a continuum is more helpful in understanding the nature of migration, and will be drawn upon. This
recognition, in turn, has an impact upon the ways in which personal and institutional resources are drawn upon by
migrants. The paper will examine which factors, including networks and/or social interactions, are most significant
in each country, whether there are key differences between receiving countries, including historically, and in how
far these contribute to strengthening the bi-directionality of these migration systems. The paper will thus
contribute to our understanding of migration feedback processes and development of migration systems.

28 ‘We feel at home here': Swedish migrants to industrial Pennsylvania 1880-1940 as social
actors in a continuing migration process
Elizabeth Baigent
University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session II (D): Feedback – Labour migration 1330-1500

This paper examines how Swedish migrants to the iron and steel town of McKeesport, Pennsylvania, arrived in the
town, that is, the processes which shaped their arrival, employment, and residence in the town. It considers the
role of personal contacts (family and geographical) in spreading information, but also the role of the Swedish
institutions which the migrants founded, notably church and temperance groups and the locally produced Swedish
language newspaper. Finally it considers the role of individuals who left the town, either to return home or to go
on to other sites in the USA. It presents a picture of individuals who seem fairly powerless (they were often from
religious minorities who faced harassment in Sweden, were almost entirely excluded from McKeesport's corrupt
municipal politics, and were employees of huge corporations with little influence over their conditions of work),
but who were in fact engaged in active, informed, and continuing decision making regarding their location and
employment. It uses a range of outcomes of the migration process to consider how far individual decision making
could mitigate migrants' marginalisation in wider economic and social processes. The paper is based on a wide
range of sources from official US censuses, to Swedish-American institutional records, to personal letters. It is
attentive to subaltern voices, that is, the voices of those whose migration adventure ended in return, bankruptcy,
suicide or the workhouse; of the sick and infirm, and of women and children, to try to portray a rounded
experience of the migration process.
29 What migration means: recognising the diversity of practices embedded in cultures of
migration
Guri Tyldum1,2
1
Fafo Institute for Applied International Studies, Oslo, Norway, 2Institute of Sociology and Human Geography,
Universtity of Oslo, Oslo, Norway
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session II (D): Feedback – Labour migration 1330-1500

Building on Douglas Massey's concept of a culture of migration, this article shows how ideas of when and how
migration can be appropriate will vary, just like ideas of proper behaviour will differ between regions, at different
stages of life and according to, for instance, gender, responsibilities and class. Consequently, migration is rarely
perceived to be either good or bad. Instead it is understood as a potential response in particular situations for
particular groups. The article shows how approaching migration studies with an awareness of the variation in
meanings attached to migration, makes us better equipped to understand why some migrate and others do not.
The approach is illustrated through a case study of migration from Western Ukraine.

30 Mixed return migration: the case of the Finnish and Swedish migration system
Östen Wahlbeck
University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session III (A): Migration systems – Return 1530-1700

The focus of this paper is on the long-term development of migration systems. The paper argues that return
migration patterns develop over time and in later stages they might include an increasing number of people of
non-migrant origin. The argument is based on a study of the development of the migration system involving
Finland and Sweden. The two countries provide a good case for studying the long-term development of migration
patterns, since there has been a full freedom of movement and the migration patterns are well documented. The
paper argues that the post-war labour migration from Finland to Sweden created a transnational social space
(Faist 2000) that still today facilitates migration between the two countries. Although Finnish citizens dominate
the migration flows in both directions, the number of Swedish migrants has steadily increased. Especially, we find
an increasing number of Swedish males moving from Sweden to Finland. Interviews with Swedish immigrants in
Finland indicate that this new pattern can be explained by the development of the transnational social space
involving an increasing number of mixed families. The paper argues that the return migrant population becomes
increasingly diverse with the passing of time and in later stages the migration system is characterised by a ‘mixed
return migration’ rather than by a simple return migration of people of migrant origin.

31 Back to square one: socio-economic integration of deported migrants in North Africa


Anda David
DIAL - Université Paris Dauphine, Paris, France
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session III (A): Migration systems – Return 1530-1700

This paper addresses the issue of socio-economic integration of forced return migrants, focusing on the Maghreb
countries. Starting from the hypothesis that the return has to be prepared, I test whether a disruption in the
migration cycle, such as deportation, increases the individual's vulnerability and affects her integration from both a
structural and socio-cultural point of view, using the 2006 MIREM survey. Concerning the structural integration, I
only focus on labour market outcomes and thus use econometric models for unemployment probability and labour
market status. Using a probit, I find that forced returnees have a higher probability to be unemployed compared to
voluntary returnees. They also have lower probabilities of being a business owner or employer. It is interesting to
notice that the negative effect is statistically significant not only immediately after return but also in the long run,
at survey time. Therefore, there is evidence of medium and long term impact of forced return migration. Drawing
on Fokkema & de Haas (2011), I construct a socio-cultural re-integration index that includes aspects from
satisfaction with the return to family structure in the origin and destination countries. I show that forced return
has a statistically significant negative impact on the re-integration index, using different specifications. As a
robustness check, I match forced returnees and voluntary returnees on observable characteristics and find a
negative impact of the forced return. I find that forced returnees are more vulnerable to negative labour market
outcomes compared to voluntary returnees. Forced return also has a significant negative impact on socio-cultural
integration, thus increasing the incentives to re-migrate. The absence of forced returnees from the labor market,
or their underperformances, creates a net loss for the origin country and creates incentives to re-migrate.
32 Return migration and the development of migration systems: the end of a cycle or a new
beginning?
Sonia Pereira1, Sueli Siqueira2
1
IGOT-University of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal, 2UNIVALE, Governador Valadares, Brazil
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session III (A): Migration systems – Return 1530-1700

The development of migration systems is sustained by ‘flows and counter flows of people' (Mabogunje 1970) as
well as flows of information, goods and remittances. Nevertheless, migration studies have been more concerned
with the ‘flows of people' than with the reverse flows, made up of returned migrants. Fazito (2005) highlights the
important role of return migration for the constitution of migration systems both at the level of the discourse and
of the actual practices of return. According to this author migration flows of return are fundamental for the
consolidation of migration systems.
This paper seeks to explore the role of return migration in shaping migration systems by drawing on the
experiences of Brazilian returned migrants. Research done on return to Brazil (Pereira and Siqueira 2012) already
pointed to the fact that return does not necessarily correspond to the ‘end of a cycle' leading to a stable
reestablishment in the country of origin but can actually lead to ‘new beginnings' both through re-emigration and
through the intermediation of new migration flows of friends and family. Particularly in the case of Brazil, return
has often taken place after short to medium term stays abroad and while the migrants are still of working age. By
drawing on qualitative data obtained through interviews with returned migrants in Brazil and quantitative data
obtained through a survey in Brazil (both for research project THEMIS) we will seek to explore more in-depth the
dynamics of return and to discuss the ways in which the development of migration systems also depends on these
counter flows of people.

33 Guyanese migration since independence: migration policies, migrant networks, and


postcolonial ties
Simona Vezzoli
International Migration Institute, Oxford, UK
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session III (B): Feedback – Intersections with policy 1530-1700

Historical migration patterns in the Caribbean saw a transformation in the 1960s-70s as many former colonies
gained independence and new migration policies were introduced at origin and destination. If some policies
potentially may have reduced migration opportunities towards former colonial states, migrant networks and post-
colonial ties established before independence may have acted as migration-facilitating factors to sustain
migration. Without overlooking important contextual factors at origin and destination, we could hypothesise that
border controls and migration policies, migrant networks, and postcolonial ties should explain in part the variations
in migration patterns following independence.
To explore this hypothesis, I use data from an in-depth case study of Guyana. From 1960-2000 the overall
emigrant stock grew from 6 to 48 per cent of the total population, whereas the emigrant stock in the UK fell from
over 37 to less than 1 per cent during the same period. Immigration policies, negative economic performance and
growing racial tensions in the UK have been provided as explanations of such drop. At the same time, less
restrictive immigration policies in North America may explain the development of new destinations. But why such
a severe drop, unlike other British Caribbean countries? This case suggests that the beneficial connectivity
provided by migrant networks and post-colonial ties may in fact have been left ‘unused' as the objectives of
migrants evolved and their interest towards the old migration destination declined.
This paper considers migration not uniquely as the result of structural forces, but as dynamic responses of
individuals to the diverse opportunities created by contextual national and international structures. In so doing,
this paper aims to improve our understanding of migration processes and dynamics, the relevance of migration
policies, migrant networks and postcolonial ties, and also provide some evidence surrounding the decline of
migrant networks.
34 The impact of sending states’ transnational policies on migration dynamics: a comparative
analysis of South American cases
Ana Margheritis
University of Southampton, Southampton, UK
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session III (B): Feedback – Intersections with policy 1530-1700

The phenomenon of state-led transnationalism (i.e., the policies and programs that nation-states implement to
reach out to their citizens abroad) is relatively under-studied within both migration and international relations
studies. Although those policies have expanded lately in all regions, the literature is still overwhelmingly concerned
with issues that affect receiving (rather than sending) countries, the economic (rather than political) impact of
migration, bottom-up transnational practices and networks, and a few cases. The mechanisms of transnational
policymaking in the migration area, as well as policy impact on migration patterns and migrants’ engagement in the
sending and receiving countries remain largely under-researched. There is also a biased selection of cases that
focuses on large and/or politically relevant emigrant communities and transnational practices that are facilitated
by geographic proximity between home and host societies. Regarding the Americas, South American cases have
been less explored than Mexico and Caribbean countries. In fact, given the unfortunate record of state violence,
dramatic economic crises, and recurrent political instability, South American countries can shed light not only on
the emergence and maintenance of out-migration patterns but also on the complex, and often conflictive,
relationship between migrant associations and state institutions across long distances.
This study assesses the results of recent emigration policies in Ecuador, Argentina, Uruguay and Mexico with an
eye on what the outcome tells us about transnational governance. The first three cases have received less
scholarly attention than others and are representative of different trends within the region, thus offering the
opportunity to expand existing knowledge and revisit critically some assumptions. Mexico provides a good
comparative background and long-term historical perspective. The outcomes do not allow for a full comparison or
generalizations, but they contribute to specify how transnational policymaking occurs and how new forms of
governance are developing in the area of human mobility.

35 Mediating migration: the role of the Qiaoban (the Office of Overseas Chinese Affairs) in
the rescaling of the Wenzhou region in China
Ya-Han Chuang
Paris IV Sorbonne University, Paris, France
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session III (B): Feedback – Intersections with policy 1530-1700

Based on a multi-sited ethnography, this paper aims to provide a nuanced picture of the meso-level interaction
between Chinese migrants, their sending/receiving localities, and the Chinese government through the case of
Wenzhou migrants in Paris and the Qiaoban - the ‘Office of Overseas Chinese Affairs’. The paper begins by
presenting the evolving relationship between migrants and the Qiaoban of Wenzhou. The Wenzhou region
experienced tremendous growth in the decades following the economic reform of 1978, which allowed for the
emergence of new patterns of migration as Wenzhou residents profited from the local informal credit institutions
and cheap local goods to take their businesses abroad. The Qiaoban has used this success to promote the
Wenzhou development model, particularly through the commemoration of emigrant histories.
I then analyse various institutional tools used to establish trans-local linkages. In the sending region, a structured
administration and associations for return migrants were established to collect information and provide services
for migrants; and, in the receiving country, numerous voluntary associations cultivate networks with political and
economic actors. Various summer camps and associations were also created to link younger generations, often
born abroad, to Wenzhou. The article concludes by examining the consequences of these initiatives. Despite the
Qiaoban's attempts to ‘rescale’ Wenzhou through promoting the ‘global Wenzhou diaspora’ (shijie wenzhouren),
interviews with migrants show that the effects vary due to the unequal degrees of development and
infrastructure in different sending villages/townships. While the use of the Qiaoban as a political institution to
strengthen links and implement policy in the diaspora is not uniformly effective, it does facilitate economic
exchange between localities, thus strengthening the trans-local networks between the sending and receiving
communities.
36 To move or not to move (when one arguably has the social capital): the mediating effect
of migrant family networks on migration aspirations and planned and unplanned Mexico -
U.S. migration
Fernando Riosmena1, Mathew Creighton2
1
University of Colorado, Boulder, USA, 2Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session III (C): – Shaping systems 1530-1700

Prior migrants with ties to migrants-to-be provide the latter with important information and assistance to move
and find accommodations and work in destinations. Individuals with better access to migration-specific social
capital are considerably more likely to aspire to and eventually migrate themselves. However, it is less understood
why some individuals with access to migrant networks and the associated migration-specific social capital do not
‘make use’ of this social capital and remain in their countries of origin. Among potential migrants, instances of
leaving social capital dormant could manifest as behaviour (i.e., no subsequent migration) or a change in
aspirations (i.e., no longer seeing migration as a potential pathway). As such, they represent an interesting case for
migration theory and a way to obtain some analytical leverage to better understand migration decisions. In this
paper, we compare the U.S. migration intentions and behaviour according to whether they have no, moderate, or
larger access to migrant networks. We use two waves from the Mexican Family Life Survey, collected in 2002 and
2005/6, to assess the translation of migration networks and stated aspirations to migrate into subsequent
migration behaviour, taking into account baseline socio-demographic and socioeconomic characteristics, migrant
networks and emigration aspirations. Among those that do not migrate, we distinguish those that remain and
continue to aspire to a future move from those that no longer consider migration to be an option.

37 The role of both migrants and institutions in an enduring pattern of migration: the case of
Almeria, a province of Spain which acts as a stage for undocumented migrants to pursue
regularisation papers
Pauline Carnet
LISST-CERS (University of Toulouse), Toulouse, France
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session III (C): – Shaping systems 1530-1700

Based on my PhD, my paper will examine how an enduring pattern of migration is sustained and the role of both
social actors and structural factors in the face of this process. Nowadays, international migrants glide between
constraints and strategies, regularity and irregularity. Their migration, built on several stages, constitutes a real
‘snakes and ladders’. In it, Almeria is a stage where it is possible to get ‘papers’. Since the 90’s, this Spanish
province specialised in agriculture has centralised African migrants who are in a precarious situation. How is this
possible? (1) Migrants have the capacity to be mobile and develop strategies to reach Europe and to look for
housing, employment and papers. (2) Spanish governmental institutions fluctuate between control and tolerance
regarding migration – fluctuation partly linked with the economic function of undocumented migrants. I will
develop theoretical constructs explaining undocumented migrants’ use and development of social networks. Their
mobility will be qualified as a mastered roving; mastering that is essentially done through social relations and the
constitution of social networks. I will explain why some of them are in a zero square, i.e., a special space-time,
intermediate between the border crossing and the insertion in the European space and characterised by the
repetition of basic survival situations.

38 Does migration from Colombia to the United Kingdom constitute a migration system?
Exploring the role of migrant agency and structural factors
Anastasia Bermudez
Instituto de Estudios Sociales Avanzados (IESA-CSIC), Córdoba, Spain
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session III (C): – Shaping systems 1530-1700

There is limited information and analysis of contemporary migration flows from Colombia to the United Kingdom,
despite the fact that this migrant community has attracted increased research interest in the new ‘super-diverse’
Britain. Colombians are one of the oldest and the second-largest national group within the growing Latin American
diaspora in London, and are behind many of the ethnic-based organisations and businesses created by this group.
However, little is known about the origins and development of these flows. This paper has two main aims. The first
is to track the emergence and development of a potential migration system linking Colombia and the United
Kingdom. The second is to explore the role of both agency and structure in this context, in line with current
scholarship on migration systems. This paper is based on the limited secondary data available, and the primary data
accumulated during more than ten years of research with the Colombian community in London. One of the main
contributions of the paper is the adoption of an intersectional approach that takes into account gender, class and
type of migration when analysing the role of agency and the so-called pioneer migrants.

39 Migrants' expected time of residence in receiving countries: a systems approach


Jack DeWaard1, Guy Abel2
1
University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, Minneapolis, USA, 2Vienna Institute of Demography, Vienna, Austria
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session III (D): Migration systems – Dynamics 1530-1700

This paper bridges recent developments in migration systems theory with empirical work on international
migration systems to examine the latter in a theoretically informed way. Unlike in previous research, our efforts go
beyond merely examining exchanges in the form of migration flows, and further consider the dynamics which
govern these exchanges. We synthesize these two components in a fairly new measure of international migration.
Termed migrants' expected time of residence, we estimate this quantity each receiving country in the EU-15
every five years from 1960-1965 to 2005-2010 and disaggregate our results by sending region, sub region, and
country. In the process, our work helps to clarify three persistent problems in the empirical research on
international migration systems, and, more generally, provides a blueprint for moving forward in this area in a way
that is consistent with recent theoretical concerns and developments.

40 Stuck in transit: the Dublin regulation, national discrepancies, and secondary migration of
asylum seekers in Europe
Jan-Paul Brekke1, Grete Brochmann2,1
1
Institute for Social Research, Oslo, Norway, 2University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session III (D): Migration systems – Dynamics 1530-1700

Tensions related to a harmonization of EUs asylum policies are reinforced by the current economic crisis. In this
paper we look at the interplay between the Dublin Regulation, national discrepancies in asylum policies and
individual migrants' strategies. We study mechanisms in the interaction between the supranational, the national
and the individual level. The empirical focal point is bilateral secondary migration between Italy and Norway.
Interviews with Eritrean migrants, with NGO personnel and government representatives in the two countries
provide the basis for a discussion of two research questions. (1) In what ways is the Dublin Regulation challenged
by national differences, migrants' strategies and the current economic crisis? (2) How does the Dublin Regulation
influence migrants' strategies regarding secondary movements within Europe? We argue that although this
particular migration system stretches back further along the route between Eritrea and Norway, it makes sense to
study the intermediary stage of the asylum journeys - the unclear transit/destination juncture of Italy and Norway.
Secondary movements within the EEA-area are indicators of regime competition and the concomitant migrant
strategies. By studying secondary movements between the South and North related to their respective regimes as
to the asylum/labour market/welfare policy nexus, it is possible to analyse tensions and interconnections between
the supranational and the national policy levels. We draw upon established topics in the field of migration studies,
such as destination choices, the role of information, feed-back systems, as well as the importance of experiences
in transit. We combine concepts developed by de Haas (2011) with a model of action used by Brekke and Aarset
(2009), to present our data: the migrants' immediate situation, their perception of opportunities in transit/other
destination countries, destination information, perceptions of hindrances, capabilities (resources, networks,
abilities), and finally destination specificity (directedness towards one specific country).

41 Migration system dynamics: evidence from global data


Mathias Czaika, Hein de Haas
IMI, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Day 2. Wednesday 25 September 2013: Parallel session III (D): Migration systems – Dynamics 1530-1700

This paper provides a critical assessment of migration systems theory based on an analysis of global migration
patterns between 1960 and 2000. Migration systems theory pioneered by Mabogunje (1970), predicts that
migration that one form of exchange between countries or places, such as trade, is likely to engender other forms
of exchange such as people, in both directions. This echoes earlier arguments by Ravenstein (1885; 1889) and
Lee (1966) that migration in one direction is likely to engender a counter-flow in the opposite direction. In this
functionalist perspective, migrant networks fulfil a vital role in the process of ‘migration diffusion' and in
facilitating return migration and counter-migration (of natives of the destination country to the origin), and this
can be seen as part of a wider process of social, cultural and political entangling and increasing equilibrium
(decreasing skewed-ness) between ‘origins' and ‘destinations'. From a historical-structural perspective, the
hypothesis that migration reciprocity increases as migration systems mature can be criticized for its ignorance of
structurally embedded power inequalities, the discriminatory role of immigration restrictions and the exclusionary
dimensions of ‘negative social capital' in migrant networks. However, these hypotheses have remained strikingly
untested, and this paper aims to fill this gap. Based on Global Migrant Stock database, it assess the extent to
which bilateral migration corridors become more balances as migration systems mature, and which factors may
explain difference in such migration system dynamics (i.e., when does such increasing equilibrium occur).
Keywords: migration systems theory, international migration, migration determinants, reciprocity
[The research leading to these results is part of the DEMIG project and has received funding from the European
Research Council under the European Community's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) / ERC
Grant Agreement 240940.]

42 Policy feedbacks and their influence on the evolution of the North American migration
system
Douglas Massey
Princeton University, Princeton, USA
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Keynote III: Feedback processes in migration 0900-1030

Although much research has examined the micro-level feedback processes by which migrant networks operate to
sustain international migration and promote the expansion of movement over time to yield a process of
cumulative causation, fewer studies have analysed the dynamic interplay between state policies and migrant
decision-making in shaping the developmental path of migration systems, or the interdependence between
evolving system properties, public opinion, and policy formation in receiving societies. This paper considers the
evolution of the North American migration system since 1965 to illustrate how state policy actions may unleash a
set of unintended feedbacks that dramatically alter the contours of international migration to produce a path-
dependent cycle producing outcomes that neither policy makers nor migrants envisioned or wanted.

43 Networks and beyond: feedback channels and the diminutive causation of international
migration
Godfried Engbersen
EUR, Rotterdam, the Netherlands
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Keynote III: Feedback processes in migration 1100-1230

This paper explores a mechanism-based explanation of migration flows. It first calls for an analysis of ‘migration
mechanisms of the middle range'. Secondly it demonstrates the relevance of such an approach by analysing the
social mechanism of diminutive causation, the counterpart of the concept of cumulative causation (Massey,
1990; Massey et al., 1998). Diminutive causation entails a dynamic multi-level explanation with interconnected
macro-, meso-, and micro-factors. We analyse the role of migrant networks in reducing immigration from
Morocco to the Netherlands in particular. Three aspects are examined: (1) changing beliefs and motivations of
migrants in the Netherlands to support prospective migrants (situational mechanism); (2) migration-undermining
feedback provided by migrants to prospective migrants (action-formation mechanism); and (3) the changing
nature of migration cultures and migratory aspirations in Morocco due to the migration-undermining feedback
from settled migrants in the Netherlands (transformational mechanism). Thirdly, this paper argues that it is crucial
to move beyond examinations of migrant networks, not only by taking into account macro institutional factors
(labour markets, state policies), but also by analysing the relevance of other feedback channels. Cumulative or
diminutive causation works not only through migrant networks but also through new feedback channels provided
by the social media. We document the role of the social media in the lives of immigrants and analyse how online
media use may influence migration aspirations of prospective migrants in Morocco, Brazil and the Ukraine. Insights
into the functioning of ‘traditional' and ‘new' channels of feedback are important for understanding endogenous
and exogenous feedback mechanisms (De Haas, 2010).
44 Revisiting migration and class
Nick Van Hear
University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session IV (A): Social actors – Class 1100-1230

Forms of social difference, affinity or allegiance such as ethnicity, gender, generation and lately religion have
recently eclipsed what used to be a mainstay of social science - socio-economic differentiation or class. This is the
case in migration studies as much as in other fields. This paper puts the case for a rehabilitation of class in the
study of migration. It revisits the argument that the form of migration and ultimately the outcomes for the
migrant are shaped by the resources a would-be migrant can muster - whether monetary or network based.
Those resources are largely determined by socio-economic background or class, which, drawing on Bourdieu, can
be conceived in terms of the disposal of different amounts and forms of capital (economic, social, symbolic etc.).
Possession of such capital, and the ability to convert it, shape the routes would-be migrants can take, the
destinations they can reach, and their life chances afterwards. This argument will be illustrated by reference to
conflict settings where members of households with different endowments of capital can access different forms
of migration. For example, asylum-seeking to affluent countries has for the last two decades or more required
substantial outlays to agents and smugglers for all but a few. It follows that it tends to be the better endowed in
terms of economic or social capital that can pursue this route. Less well-endowed households may pursue labour
migration as an option since this does not require such large outlays. Other routes such as migration for study or
marriage also entail various levels of outlay that households may or may not be able to meet. The paper will
explore the degree to which this argument holds up in the light of migration experience in conflict settings.

45 A matter of class? The dynamics of Brazilian migration to Europe


Cindy Horst1, Agnieszka Kubal2, Sonia Pereira3
1
Cindy Horst, Oslo, Norway, 2Agnieszka Kubal, Oxford, UK, 3Sonia Pereira, Lisbon, Portugal
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session IV (A): Social actors – Class 1100-1230

This paper analyses the role of class for the migration of Brazilians to Norway, Portugal and the UK, based on 120
semi-structured interviews with migrants in these countries and 90 interviews with returnees and families of
migrants in Brazil. Class has always been present in the migration debate; the distinction between the desired
‘highly-skilled' migrants and the ‘unwanted' ‘low-skilled' is an example of how this debate has been framed in
policy-making and research. Class indeed has an impact on the opportunities that people have to migrate as well
as on their incentives to move. In Europe, current immigration regimes offer higher entry opportunities for those
with high levels of education and a professional occupation than for those who appear ‘unskilled'. However,
differences in access to and processes of migration are not simply rooted in ‘skills' distinctions but also in more
complex and contextualized configurations of class. Brazilian migration to Europe provides a good illustration of
this. For example, migrants from the poor state of Bahia (Northeast) have higher incentives to migrate and help
others than migrants from the large urban metropolises São Paulo or Rio de Janeiro, with consequences also for
their use of social networks or transnational assistance.
Our paper consists of three parts: (1) critical review of the notion of class and of its manifestation in the Brazilian
context, in relation to race/skin colour, place of residence and birth, modes of speech (accent, articulation or way
of writing), gender as well as occupation and education; (2) exploration of the implications of this intersectionality
for the migration trajectories of Brazilians to the UK, Portugal and Norway: including the ‘making' of the migration
and whether and how Brazilian class realities are reproduced and re-enacted in countries of settlement; and (3)
teasing out the implications of this for the overall migration processes.

46 Agency and migrants in the labour market: social actors or submissive players?
Sonia Pereira
IGOT, University of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session IV (A): Social actors – Class 1100-1230

Migrant workers tend to cluster in particular industries, occupations and geographical areas (Castles 2000: 33,
Waldinger 1996, Anderson and Rhus 2010). These concentrations have been considered to be more dependent
on structural factors related to the demand of workers in destination countries and on the spatial organization of
their (capitalist) productive structures than on migrants' agency (Castles 2000, Piore 1979). Nevertheless, some
authors have looked at the role of meso-level factors in shaping the access to and position of migrant workers in
the labour market such as employment and recruitment agencies, employers (Peck 1996, Krissman 2005) and
migrants' social networks (Waldinger 1996: 27, Sanders et al. 2002: 306). These agents have been considered
instrumental to ensure that successive waves of migrants continue to have access to specific occupations and
industries, following the entry of the pioneers (Pereira 2010, Elrick and Lewandowska 2008), leading to the
constitution of the above-mentioned clusters. Other authors have also put forward arguments pointing to the
agency of workers (migrants and others) in shaping their own spaces and time as well as their working lives
(Herod 2001, Rogaly 2009, Coe and Jordhus-Lier 2011).
In this article I will discuss the role of migrants as social actors in the labour market in terms of how they are able
to influence their working lives and the impact of that for subsequent migrants. I will look at questions as: have
entry occupations for migrants been similar throughout the years or have they changed with time of arrival? How
is this related to shifts made by migrants to other occupations or to changes in the demand side? I use
quantitative data collected for THEMIS in destination countries (Portugal, United Kingdom, The Netherlands and
Norway) to engage in this discussion complemented with qualitative data collected through interviews in the same
countries.

47 Challenging the borders of intimacy and legality: migrant agency in response to Danish
restrictions on transnational marriage
Tess Hellgren1,2
1
RAND Europe, Cambridge, UK, 2Oxford University, Oxford, UK
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session IV (B): Migration systems – Role of policies 1100-1230

Based on my 2012 dissertation work for the Oxford MSc in Migration Studies, my presentation will explore
migrants' creative agency in response to Denmark's ‘24-year rule' limiting transnational marriage migration. My
paper will examine how Danish restrictions have impacted the decisions, identities, and livelihoods of Danish-
migrant couples - and how these couples' agentive strategies are creating new migration flows between Denmark
and southern Sweden, with implications for regional transnational belonging and on-going legal debates on the
balance of national and EU authority. Over the past ten years, immigration discourses have been increasingly
politicised in Denmark, tied to the enhanced influence of the right-wing Danish People's Party over mainstream
political leadership. Amidst the societal normalisation of anti-immigration sentiments, since 2002 legislation on
marriage migration places strict requirements of age, income, and ‘national attachment' upon any third-country
national (TCN) wishing to marry a Dane. In practice, these marriage restrictions have been a pragmatic
immigration control, considerably restricting the eligibility of potential applicants for family migration. In response
to the Danish governments' legal impediments, many Danes wishing to marry TCNs - particularly Danes in the
Copenhagen area - have chosen to move to southern Sweden, where their marriage is allowed under stronger
rights to family life derived from their status as mobile EU citizens. By relocating across the Danish border,
impacted couples are strategically navigating intersecting levels of Danish, Nordic, and EU law in their
determination to form a partnership. This provocative outcome establishes new patterns of transnational living
and identity, as many couples reside in Sweden but spend more time working and visiting family across the border
in Denmark. It also raises important questions about present and future interactions of national and supranational
legal structures in the realm of EU family migration and beyond.

48 Changing migration opportunity structures of Roma and their hosting societies: the case
of Belgium
Johan Wets, Heleen Touquet
KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session IV (B): Migration systems – Role of policies 1100-1230

The overthrowing of the socialist regimes in Eastern Europe lead to different societies, with more freedom on the
one hand, but disappearing social safety nets, economic disruption and often booming unemployment, especially
amongst ethno-cultural minorities like the Roma. As a result of the accession of Eastern European countries, some
communities saw their ‘migration opportunity structures’ change dramatically. This has led to increasing numbers
of Eastern European migrants with a Roma background in other European countries. Roma populations are on a
policy level often approached as one homogenous group. The Roma themselves are however an extremely
heterogeneous group having different nationalities, speaking different languages, adhering to different religions,
having different visions and experiences on the labour market an defining themselves in different ways as Roma,
Sinti, Kalderash, etc. There live in the different European countries, some are EU citizens and some not. Some rely
heavily on social security benefits and others work and provide for their own sustenance. But there are many
common characteristics: they have been (often suppressed) minorities for centuries, they have extended
networks spread over different countries and they have specific forms of organization. The question that can be
raised is what exactly makes them Roma? Is it the fact that they are very often poor, is it a ‘culture of poverty’ or
is it a ‘Roma culture’? Is the migration of these ethno-cultural minorities to (other) EU countries a ‘Roma
migration’ or a migration of Roma individuals? The paper proposed will address this issue and look at the dynamic
of new Roma migration, on the ‘push and pull’ factors (reaction of host societies), at opportunity structures and
networks. The data used in this paper results from an analysis of international research on the one hand and of a
research project executed in Belgium in 2012.

49 The effect of local transformations on migration aspirations in Brazil, Morocco, and


Ukraine
Dominique Jolivet
IMI, Oxford, UK
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session IV (B): Migration systems – Role of policies 1100-1230

The likelihood of having migration aspirations can be higher in regions with a deep rooted culture of migration than
in areas where migration is less normative (Kandel and Massey, 2002). However, transformations -or the lack of
thereof- in the local context may have an effect on migration aspirations and therefore on the evolving patterns
of the culture of migration in the region. This paper explores the effect of perceived changes in the communities
of origin on migration aspirations, comparing areas with distinct cultures of migration. The analysis draws on the
results of 1246 surveys gathered between 2012 and 2013 in different regions of Brazil, Morocco and Ukraine
for the THEMIS project (Theorising the Evolution of European Systems of Migration). THEMIS explores the
determinants of migration behaviour and why some of the initial moves to Europe result in the formation of
significant migration systems while some migration processes decrease gradually or stagnate. Firstly, the paper
examines respondents' views on migration and on the social, cultural and economic effects of migration at the
community level. Secondly, it explores the regional exogenous changes perceived by the respondents in the last
10 years at an economic and socio-political level. Finally, it analyses the impact of perceived regional
transformations on migration aspirations with three logistic regression models -one per country- that include a
variable to control for the effect of research areas with distinct contexts, migration histories, and cultures of
migration.

50 What kind of asylum and which destination? Afghan asylum seekers transiting from
Greece
Angeliki Dimitriadi
Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy, Athens, Attiki, Greece
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session IV (C): Social actors – Conflict and constraint 1100-1230

The paper discusses Afghan asylum seekers in Greece and how migrant agency factors in the context of transit
from Greece to other EU member states. Labelled in public discourse as transit migrants, I argue that their
mobility, when successfully pursued, is more than the sum of structural constraints; they are not only escaping
from specific factors but simultaneously pursuing specific conditions. Thus, an element of choice and active
participation in the migratory journey is incorporated in the discussion on asylum. The paper draws from two
sources, the fieldwork conducted in the framework of my PhD thesis (2009 - 2012) across Greece and the
fieldwork conducted in 2013 in Athens, in the context of the project “IRMA-Governing Irregular Migration”
carried out as part of a funded research project. Drawing from interviews conducted with irregular Afghan
migrants in Greece, that were ‘in transit’, asylum is discussed not from the perspective of safety, but as a way of
acquiring a particular identity and social position coupled with specific benefits. This raises once more the question
of whether we can incorporate migrant agency in the context of forced migration, and the case of Afghans shows
that agency does not negate the need for refuge; rather the need for refuge can be complemented by the
expectations for certain conditions and preferences to be met. From this perspective, it is possible to view the
asylum seeker as an active agent of his/her migration, attempting and often succeeding in determining his/her
own migration journey
51 Violence, surveillance and agency experiences of the women refugees in the Italian
reception camps
Barbara Pinelli
University of Milano-Bicocca, Milano, Italy
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session IV (C): Social actors – Conflict and constraint 1100-1230

This paper focuses on the relation between agency and the process of becoming refugees. In the last four years, I
have carried out an ethnographic research in southern Italy refugee camps organized by the Italian government
for the detention and control of undocumented migrants, in order to document the violence experiences of
women asylum seekers who have reached Italy after spending a period of time in Libya, and crossing the
Mediterranean Sea. These women have endured terrible abuses in their trajectory toward Europe; once inside the
camps, they are subject to forms of moral and institutional violence, surveillance mechanisms, that shape their
subjectivities as women and refugees. In particular, they are exposed to the disciplinary regimes of the camps and
the imaginary of assistance culture that perceive them only as victims, female subjects to be emancipated and
devoid of any agency. In this paper, I will show how refugee women are not mere bodies to be educated,
controlled or emancipated: I will describe the weight of the memory of violence and of the power abuses
experienced in the arrival context, paying attention on how women refugees have coped with these burdens, how
they read the power networks they were involved in or the gap between refugees' self-perceptions and imaginary
produced by the system of protection. I will refer to the issue of subjectivity (as multi-positioned and an ongoing
process) as an important key for exploring both signs suffering, and the dimensions of agency, desire (to
reconstruct a new life) and hope for the future, and the practices performed by women asylum seekers to
reconstruct their existences after the flight. My intention is to show how the recognition of agency has an
important political valence when ethnographic research involves subjectivities affected by violence and living in
extremely marginal conditions.

52 Remaining subjects despite structural constraints: migratory strategies among refugees


hosted in Italy after their expulsion from Libya
Gabriele Tomei
University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session IV (C): Social actors – Conflict and constraint 1100-1230

During the 2011 Lybian crisis, Gheddafi decided to expel many African and Asiatic workers, forcing them to
illegally migrate to Italy as a reaction to the government support of the international military intervention against
his regime. As a consequence of that mass expulsion, and under the menace of the regime army, more than
30.0000 refugee arrived in Italy where they all have been requested to seek for refugee status and, consequently,
they have been hosted for months into special centres, waiting for the conclusion of the application process under
administrative limitations of their freedom and of their mobility in space and time. Despite the strong pressure of
these constraining new conditions, some refugees reacted in order to give chances to their own migratory
projects, using administrative dispositive as opportunities: someone used government programme to return home;
others became illegal and escaped to other European countries; others decided to remain in Italy, using the
welfare system to integrate in the host society.
There seems to be three main strategies against the structural constraints: (1) improving their social capital,
through informal networking among people of the same nationality and fraternizing with centres' personnel and
local population; (2) defending their basic rights, mobilizing collective protests against the inactivity or the abuses
of the Italian bureaucracy; (3) sustaining their livelihood, mapping the territory looking for some working
opportunities. According with the theoretical approaches that unveil the autonomous structuring power of
subjectivity against the strength of the context structural conditions, with a special focus on the role of social
networks and of their cultural and symbolical dimensions in orienting migrant's habits and trajectories, the
hypothesis above mentioned will be tackled using a set of qualitative data from first hand interviews with refugees
and centre's personnel, collected in Italy between April 2012 and February 2013.
53 ‘How to get into London?’: the role played by travel agencies to move Brazilian migrants
to the UK
Gustavo Dias1,2
1
Goldsmiths College, London, UK, 2FCT - Foundation for Science and Technology, Lisbon, Portugal, 3GEB - Brazilian
Migration to the UK Research Group, London, UK
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session IV (D): Feedback – Institutions 1100-1230

How have Brazilian migrants moved into London after the September 11? Who are the social agents and what are
the social conditions of movement involved in such mobility? Since 9/11 the EU have reinforced its borders and
mobility control in the airports in order to stop undesirable mobile people, including undocumented migrant
workers. As a consequence Brazilian migrants have created escape routes to literally escape from that mobility
control (Papadopoulos et al. 2008, Frontex 2011). Considering the fact that migratory mobility is not just a
matter of network involving kinship and relatives, this paper follows the argument that behind migration there is
an informal industry which provides the mobility according to global politics and events (Khosravi 2010).
Therefore, through an empirical study on Brazilian migration from Minas Gerais state to London, this presentation
attempts to discuss how migration routes are carefully organized through package tours by travel agencies
managed by pioneers, who became specialized in providing tactic of border crossing movement after the 9/11.
Such tactic aims to transform the migratory mobility of those migrant workers into a more desirable type of
mobility, the touristic one (Adey 2004). In other words, they have promoted a border-crossing movement able to
ensure the connectedness between Brazil and the UK through any small airport hubs located in the Schengen area
and British territory where the surveillance, according to them, is less strict to tourists. As a result this paper
argues that due to the border reinforcement adopted by the EU after the terrorist attacks (Balibar 2002,
Mezzadra 2007), friends and family members abroad are not the only ones who provide support to Brazilian
emigrating to London, a migratory industry composed by specialized pioneers and their travel agencies have also
played important roles in such mobility (Bakewell, de Hass and Kubal 2011).

54 Do institutions play a role in skilled migration? The case of Italy


Annamaria Nifo1, Gaetano Vecchione2
1
University of Sannio, Benevento, Italy, 2University of Naples II, Naples, Italy
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session IV (D): Feedback – Institutions 1100-1230

The factors identified by economic theory as determining migrants' decisions appear less relevant to the choices
of the highly skilled, a fairly small but significant group which is able to wield a major economic impact on regional
economies. This paper is based on the idea that in their migration choices the highly skilled are motivated to look
for an area or context able to ensure a higher income and better employment opportunities. At the same time, it
should be a favourable socio-economic environment with well-functioning local government institutions. The
decisive impact of institutional quality on the level of services, the environment, regional development and the
overall quality of life in the destination area has been extensively studied in the literature. Building on such
previous studies, by using data from the ‘Survey on the professional recruitment of graduates’ in Italy conducted
by the National Statistics Office (ISTAT) in 2007 on a sample of 47,300 individuals who graduated in 2004, we
study the impact of provincial institution quality on the probability of resident graduates migrating. Our Heckman
Probit estimation indicates that institutions do matter for migration decisions and their importance is comparable
to that of per-capita income provincial differences.

55 New immigrant groups, integration and forms of citizenship in the global city: the case of
Latin Americans in Europe
Fabiola Pardo Noteboom
Externado University of Colombia, Bogotá, Colombia
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session IV (D): Feedback – Institutions 1100-1230

In the last two decades, and with the so-called failure of multiculturalism, an important debate has emerged on
the formulation of integration policies for immigrants in Western Europe. While these policies should aim to
strengthen the participation of immigrant groups in all spheres of society and encourage intercultural processes,
particularly in large cities, in practise, immigrants must assume the entire responsibility of their integration. This
paper is based on the results of a recent comparative study on the integration practices of Latin American
migrants in Amsterdam, London and Madrid in the framework of their specific local integration policies. Given the
international socio-political context, Europe is undergoing a moment of resistance to non-western immigration
and there is a strong tendency towards enforcing control measures and the establishment of strict selection
criteria. In relation to integration, governments are resorting to short-term legislation interventions in an attempt
to achieve results. Integration becomes a democratic urgency and rapid solutions are given for processes that
need long-term perspectives. As shown in the case of Latin Americans, the efficiency of these policies is limited
and migrants are more influenced by their informal social and civic networks and trajectories than by the formal
policies designed to integrate them. In the context of the global city, these migrant intercultural trajectories have
created alternative forms to experience citizenship and a genuine city identity without a direct connection to the
national identity promoted by formal integration policies. The resurgence of the concepts of citizenship and
national identity as a strategy for integration and social cohesion, and the urgency that characterised integration
policies for processes that requires long-term views are leading to the inefficiency if not, the failure of these
legislative efforts.

56 Highly skilled migrants and the European mobility industry


Saara Koikkalainen
University of Lapland, Rovaniemi, Finland
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session IV (D): Feedback – Institutions 1100-1230

The paper examines intra-European mobility and migrant agency from the perspective of highly skilled migrants,
namely Finns working abroad in other EU15 countries. It is based on a web survey titled Working in Europe
(n=364) conducted in 2008, its continuation in 2010 (n=194) and 18 migrant interviews (2011). The paper
draws on Karen O'Reilly's (2012) practice theory for international migration. It focuses on understanding highly
skilled mobility in Europe through an analysis of the external, macro level structures that ease or impede mobility,
as well as the internal, micro level structures that affect the mobility behaviour of this particular migrant group. At
the meso level the paper introduces a novel concept of mobility industry, which helps facilitate intra-European
mobility.
The term migration industry has been used to refer to the various agents and organizations helping migrants,
remittance companies, as well as human smugglers who manage irregular migration. I argue that this term can also
be useful in understanding different forms of intra-European mobility. In the European context permanent
migration is not the only or perhaps even the main form of transnational movement across borders, so mobility
industry is a more fitting term to be used. It can be roughly divided into two categories: firstly the non-
commercial institutions and agencies that provide information and facilitate the mobility of students, trainees and
academics, as well as job-seekers, and secondly the commercial relocation and headhunting agencies, consultants
and job search portals whose business it is to facilitate the mobility of workers and professionals. The paper
concludes that the paths that lead abroad from Finland are influenced by both external structures and individual
migrant agency, as voluntary, intra-European migrants can choose their destinations according to their life
projects focusing on work and careers, but also on quality of life and adventure.

57 From post-socialist to post-accession pioneering: the shaping of Romanian migration


networks to Spain and the UK
Chris Moreh
Northumbria University, Newcastle Upon Tyne, UK
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session IV (E): Social actors – Networks 1100-1230

This paper examines the dynamics of Romanian migration networks following the fall of socialism, by comparing
two receiving countries, Spain and the UK. While Spain is a well-established destination for Romanian migrants,
who constitute the most numerous foreign-born group in the Iberian country, the UK has seen more moderate
levels of immigration from Romania, slightly ascending following the latter's EU accession in 2007. The question
posed in the paper is why movements to certain places have been more able to develop into systems than others.
To answer this question, the paper analyses the development of particular migration networks in the two
countries, showing the complex relationships and contingent events that led to the emergence and preservation
of these systems. State, market and individual actors come into dynamic interaction to create and shape migration
systems, and the paper traces the activities, histories and effects of key pioneers, migration policies and economic
developments. The presented data come from an intensive ethnographic fieldwork in the Community of Madrid,
Spain, during the first half of 2009, and an on-going research in the UK.
An overarching structural factor analysed is European integration, which can influence all stages of the
development and decline of a migration system. Romania's EU accession occurred almost concomitantly with the
eruption of the global economic crisis, and the paper examines how these political and economic developments
shape existing migrant networks and the initiation of new ones. In this respect, the paper compares the role and
position of post-socialist and post-accession pioneers within the political-economic structure prevalent at the
time of their migration. Through this double comparative lens, the paper is able to expand our knowledge on the
complexity of migration phenomena, and show how the interrelations between individual and structural factors
shape migration systems.

58 Strong ties, weak ties and protection for domestic workers: Ethiopian domestic worker
migration to the Middle East
Katie Kuschminder
Maastricht University, Maastricht, the Netherlands
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session IV (E): Social actors – Networks 1100-1230

Few comparisons have been made that examine the difference in migration outcomes for migrants that migrate
via a strong versus a weak tie. This paper will contribute to this research area through an examination of Ethiopian
female migration to the Middle East by using a network lens to compare migration via weak or strong ties.
Domestic workers provide an interesting case for this analysis as they are vulnerable in their migration, and
network supports can provide critical resources for the safety and security of the migrant and ensure an economic
livelihood. The central hypothesis of this paper is two-fold: first that women with dense ties have greater
opportunity to access migration due to their networks; and secondly that women migrating via strong ties would
have the greatest opportunity for protection in the Middle East. Women migrating via weak ties, namely a migrant
broker, would on the other hand, be less likely to have accurate information regarding migration, and secondly, be
more likely to experience abuse in the Middle East. Migration via dense networks should allow for greater access
to information and the ability for networks to assist an individual if needed. Migration via weak ties suggests that
assistance is less likely to be available upon arrival. It is recognized that networks alone cannot determine the
outcome of migration, and other issues such as legality in migration will be explored in the analysis. The paper will
demonstrate that networks are not enough to protect migrants against the structural conditions in the Middle
East.

59 The influence of networks in the migration decisions of Kenyan and Nigerian women bound
for the United Kingdom
Linda Oucho
African Migration and Development Policy Centre, Nairobi, Kenya
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session IV (E): Social actors – Networks 1100-1230

Networks and the information they convey can play a very important role in the decision to migrate. With
technological advancements taking place in today's globalised world, potential migrants can consult individuals on
information about their chosen destination, but they can also explore their options by using the internet to
investigate the information that they need in order to make a decision of whether to migrate to their chosen
destination. The purpose of this paper is to discuss the changing nature of networks through time with a focus on
exploring how different types of networks were used by Kenyan and Nigerian women in their decision to migrate
to the UK as an individual or a family unit. The paper is based on my PhD thesis completed in November 2011
which focused on the migration decision-making experiences of Kenyan and Nigerian women in London from
1990 to 2010. The aim of the research was to capture women's agency in migration decisions and networks
played a very important role in the decision-making process. Fawcett's conceptual framework (1989) was useful
for understanding the linkages that exist between networks and potential migrants in terms of the information/
assistance shared and how they operate within a migration system. Fawcett's primary focus was to examine the
communication between potential migrants and their networks as well as observable links such as trade flows or
family obligations (1989: 673). He identified three types of linkages (tangible, regulatory and relational) and four
categories of networks, namely State-to-State Relations, Mass Culture Connections, Family and Personal
Networks and Migrant Agency Activities (1989: 673). Although outdated, Fawcett's conceptual framework
provided guidelines to understand the relationship between migrants and how the information influenced the
Kenyan and Nigerian women's decision to migrate to the United Kingdom.
60 ‘I may not be legal, but I am not a criminal’: the consequences of criminalization of
migration for migrants' everyday lives in Europe
Agnieszka Kubal
University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session V (A): Feedback – Intersection with policy (continued) 1330-1500

This paper grapples with the interplay between involuntary return and the convergence of criminal and migration
law that accompanies this process. ‘Crimmigration’ – the term originally coined by Stumpf (2006) to demonstrate
the asymmetric incorporation of criminal law into migration law - now seem to have a life on its own. Academic
papers are full of crimmigrant bodies (Aas 2011), gendered crimmigrants (Hartry 2012) - either being deported
or detained: foreigners in carceral age (Bosworth and Kaufman 2011). The deportation regime (De Genova and
Peutz 2010) seem to extend to more states, and the borders between security of residence and deportability
have never been so porous. This paper juxtaposes the above debates in the European context. I give voice to
those whose ‘lives are shaped by law' (Sarat 1990) utilizing the data stemming from 270 qualitative interviews
with return migrants in Brazil, Morocco and Ukraine from Norway, Netherlands, Portugal and the UK. Based on this
evidence, I contest the overwhelming ‘crimmigration' label and propose a return to its original employment - to
delineate the convergence between the legal spheres and not as a concept to describe people (as in
‘crimmigrants'), as empirical facts inadvertently escape the overly simplistic categories and terms. I discuss the
intersection of criminal and migration law and how they play out in immigrants' everyday lives, voluntary and
involuntary return.

61 Trasnational families and state-services provision in the communities of origin


Mariana Gabarrot
Tec de Monterrey, Monterrey, Mexico
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session V (A): Feedback – Intersection with policy (continued) 1330-1500

The paper explores how transnational and translocal family formations represent a challenge to social
development policies in the communities of origin. The text contributes to debates regarding the relationship
between individual migrants and other social actors in two main aspects. First, their agency is situated as part of a
broader process of social reproduction, by focusing on migrants’ relationships with non-migrant family members.
Second, by analysing the role of transnational family members as subjects of social policies within their countries
of origin. Case studies are presented in the context of the Mexico-US Migration system. Analysis is based on
ethnographic and in depth interviews from recent fieldwork done in the northern state of Nuevo León. Overall,
results show complex familial relations which include negotiations for the use of different assets, including
economic (stemming from remittances), human (such as formal and informal knowledge) and social (kinship and
broader networks). Access to government programs such as public education and health services is crucial to
potentialize those assets and ensure wellbeing both for migrant and non-migrant members of families. Finally, the
paper argues that viewing migrants in their relationship with other social institutions, such as the family and the
state, will help to understand specific contexts within countries of origin which may either perpetuate or hinder
migrant networks.

62 Emergence, evolution, and dynamic influence of migration systems in northeast Thailand


Sara Curran, Walker Frahm
University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session V (A): Feedback – Intersection with policy (continued) 1330-1500

By the late 20th century, migration theory had shifted significantly and recognized that migration momentum and
systems appeared to be an increasingly significant factor in explaining migration behaviour and migration patterns.
However, few research programs have been designed to prospectively examine the emergence, evolution and
dynamic influence of migration systems upon migration behaviour and the reciprocal dynamic of how migration
behaviour generates feedback mechanisms that influence the evolution of migration systems. In this study from
North-eastern Thailand we draw upon both longitudinal qualitative and quantitative information from 22 villages
in North-eastern Thailand that observes the emergence, evolution and dynamic influence of migration systems.
The author has been involved in the design and data collection of qualitative fieldwork and surveys of all
households in these 22 villages from 1989 until 2007 (N=25,000 individuals in 7,000 households). This study
builds upon a series of analyses that have been conducted previously by the author and includes the modelling of
the reciprocal dynamism of migration systems and individual or household migration behaviour, complemented
with an analysis of the qualitative field work to elaborate on the possible mechanism at work.

63 The relevance of ‘feedback mechanisms' in migration impacted regions in relation with


changing macro socio-economic contexts: a case study on Moroccan and Turkish
emigration regions
Christiane Timmerman1, Kenneth Hemmerechts2,1, Helene de clerck1, Roos Willems1
1
University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium, 2free university of Brussels, Brussels, Belgium
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session V (B): Feedback – Socio-economic conditions 1330-1500

People form migration related perceptions – especially in regions with a long emigration tradition where migration
has reached a certain momentum - from a range of specific local, national and international sources (Timmerman
et. al 2010, De Haas 2010, Portes 2010). However, these regional migration impacted cultures are situated in
changing socio-economic macro contexts that also influence people's perceptions of opportunities that migration
may generate. Europe is going through an economic crisis while some ‘source countries' are witnessing
considerable economic growth; as for example Turkey. This does not apply for Morocco, another important
‘source country' for Europe. In this contribution we focus on the relation between (1) the significance of feedback
mechanisms of international migration and (2) changing macro socio-economic contexts. Data are collected
using a survey with a representative sample (2000 respondents) and in-depth interviews (80) in two seemingly
similar regions in Turkey (Emirdag, Dinar) as well as in Morocco (Todra Valley, Central Plateau) which, however,
have different emigration experiences: Emirdag, Todra Valley being high migration impacted regions, while Dinar,
Central Plateau are not (FP7 EUMAGINE Project).
Using multiple regression analyses and qualitative cross-country analyses we found that people in the Turkish
migration impacted region (Emirdag) who belong to transnational family networks are less eager to migrate and
that the European crisis is considered an important issue compared to similar people in the low emigration area
(Dinar). In Morocco, however, people in the migration impacted region (Todra Valley) still have higher migration
aspirations regardless of transnational family networks than in the low emigration area (Central Plateau). Thus,
feedback mechanisms (presence of transnational family networks) matter for explaining migration dynamics.
Moreover, with changing larger socio-economic contexts – European economic crisis versus Turkish economic
growth – the impact of negative feedback of transnational family networks on migration aspirations is likely to
increase.

64 'Se quedó ¿a volver?': crisis, stay, and return in the case of Ecuadorians in Spain
Juan Iglesias
Instituto U. Estudios sobre Migraciones, Madrid, Spain
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session V (B): Feedback – Socio-economic conditions 1330-1500

The communication is based on a mixed research focused on the study of the effects of the current economic
crisis is generating on the migration processes and projects of Ecuadorians living in Spain. Communication seeks to
explore, specifically, in the processes of stay, new international mobility and return that the current economic
crisis is making among the ethnic Ecuadorian population in Spain. Before the crisis, Ecuadorian migrants formed
one of the most significant migratory realities in the Spanish context, not only for its volume, 458,437 (INE, 1-1-
2008) but, especially, for their progressive and widespread process of incorporation, settlement and rooted in
Spanish society (access regulation and nationalization, family reunification, residential settlement, some upward
job mobility within the secondary market, etc.) Crisis has destabilized the on-going process which substantially
change processes and migration projects Ecuadorians in a bundle of options that include not only the commitment
to stay in Spain, but new international mobility processes, among which the different processes of return to the
country of origin. A landscape that has substantially changed the immigration system that Ecuadorians had built
with Spain in recent years and it shows not only the impacts of structural origin on migration processes, but the
dynamism of the immigrants themselves and their resources and social networks to redefine their migration
projects. Communication, which is part of a research project of the National I + D + I (CSO2009-10429) presents
the main features of social and migration issues listed above, from quantitative and qualitative study conducted
between 2009 - 2012 with the Ecuadorian community in Spain.
65 'Do as I say, not as I do?': analysing the potential effects of immigrants' representations
of the crisis on migration systems. Insights from a peripheral southern European country
Dora Sampaio, Rui Carvalho
Centre for Geographical Studies (University of Lisbon), Lisbon, Portugal
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session V (B): Feedback – Socio-economic conditions 1330-1500

The current context of economic crisis is producing multiple challenges, particularly evident in European
economies and societies. This has and will continue to influence the reshaping of international migration streams in
Europe, both at the countries of origin and destination. These changes can be felt more vividly in those migratory
destinations facing major financial constraints and higher unemployment rates, as is the case with most southern
European countries, among which Portugal is included. Bearing this in mind, this paper examines how the
representations of the crisis may contribute to (re)define the migration pathways of international migrants in
Portugal and how they influence the evolution and dynamics of the country's positioning in the European migration
systems. Resorting to data from the THEMIS project, a comparative analysis of three immigrant groups (Brazilians,
Moroccans and Ukrainians) - drawn mostly from qualitative information obtained from interviews seconded with
quantitative data from key questions of a questionnaire - is proposed. The focus will lay on both individual and
contextual variables, aiming to verify if analytical dimensions such as the country of origin, the stage of maturation
of the migrant system, or individual socio-demographic variables (e.g. gender, age, educational level,
socioeconomic status), assume an important role in shaping these immigrants' representations of the crisis, their
stated intentions towards future migration movements and also the feedback they transmit to co-nationals in
their countries of origin. Preliminary results suggest that the intensity and contours of the immigrants' social and
spatial discourses and representations of the crisis appear to differ between immigrant groups. Moreover, these
visions do not tend to translate directly into intentions to redefine individual and family migration trajectories nor
even into the advice given to co-nationals in their countries of origin, being instead influenced, although to a
different extent, by the analytical dimensions previously considered.

66 Skilled Iranians in Germany and the United States: exploring migrants' networks
Uta Lehmann
Institute for Migration Research and Intercultural Studies, Osnabrück, Niedersachsen, Germany
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session V (C): Social actors – Networks 1330-1500

Every year 150.000 highly skilled persons leave Iran and seek new opportunities in the United States and Europe
(Carrington/Detragiache 1998). A look back at history shows that these migration flows have a long tradition.
They first started with educational exchanges in the early 19th century and reached its climax in the year of the
Iranian Revolution in 1979. A well-educated Diaspora has resulted as a result of these movements. However,
empirical findings indicate that Iranians immigrating to the United States are more successful in sustaining and
promoting their educational and professional potential than Iranians coming to Europe. Here, the complex
interconnection of influencing factors at the micro-, meso and macro level within a migration system becomes
important. One key trait that emerged in my empirical findings is the role of social networks. My paper explores
the dynamics of Iranian skilled immigration from a Bourdieuian perspective on social capital and argues that
networks serve to overcome structural obstacles in migration. They help to generate social capital, which can be
used to transform educational potential into cultural capital that facilitates swift market access.

67 Migration networks in action: case of Daba Tianeti


Tamar Zurabishvili1, Tinatin Zurabishvili2
1
Center for Social Sciences, Tbilisi, Georgia, 2Caucasus Research Resource Center, Tbilisi, Georgia
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session V (C): Social actors – Networks 1330-1500

International labour migration started from most of the former Soviet republics only after the dissolution of the
Soviet Union, and Georgia is no exception. Since then, however, migration flows and the character of migration
from Georgia changed drastically from being overwhelmingly directed towards Russia and consisting of male
migrants, to redirecting itself towards the EU and Northern America and becoming feminized. Present paper
analysis how migration networks develop and work based on the analysis of two waves of fieldwork, conducted in
a small migrant sending community in Georgia, Daba Tianeti. First fieldwork was conducted in Daba Tianeti in
2006 and employed a mixed method approach, consisting of the survey of all Daba Tianeti Households (1062
cases) and 23 in-depth interviews with return migrants, family members of current migrants, and potential
migrants. In 2008, a survey of all Daba Tianeti households was conducted (957 cases) together with a survey of
Daba Tianeti migrants in Athens (52 cases), Greece.
By 2008, every third household in Daba Tianeti had at least one migrant abroad, mainly in Western Europe, Israel,
and the US, and about half of the migrant stock from the community emigrated with the help of a close relative or
a friend. Present paper argues that despite the relatively short period of inclusion in the migratory processes,
migrants from Daba Tianeti have already developed migration networks that effectively connect them with both
each other and members of Daba Tianeti community left behind. The paper draws on both qualitative and
quantitative data to demonstrate how migration networks developed and to closely examine several cases when
migration of one family member led to the migration of several other family members and/or friends from the
community.

68 Translocal rhythms of gendered care: Latvian women creating lives on the move
Aija Lulle
University of Latvia, Riga, Latvia
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session V (C): Social actors – Networks 1330-1500

In this article I propose a concept of translocal rhythms as a novel contribution to the examination of migration
dynamics in contemporary Europe. The article is illustrated by examples of translocal migration projects that
emerge from a specific kind of interference in the rhythms of work and care. Besides, I demonstrate, how a
particular neoliberal version of the good mother emerges, informed by capitalism and gender regimes in post-
socialist Latvia, as well as the current demand for female labour in Western European spaces. Translocal rhythms
are revealed through a time-geographic investigation of distant emplacements of workplace and home, and
neoliberalism-based justifications by mothers themselves about why a certain mobility project of care from a
distance is prioritised over physical proximity with those in need of care. Data is drawn from interviews with
mothers, who provided care through being mobile between Latvia and the Channel Island of Guernsey. I suggest
that this augmented concept of translocal rhythms has a potential to contribute to the existing literature in
migration studies, providing new insights into how translocal practices continue over time and space, and how and
whether the synchronisation of gendered care ceases to be a translocal practice.
Keywords: translocal rhythms, care, mobility project, post-socialism, Latvia, Guernsey

69 Migrant networks and the migration process: considering the spatial and temporal
dimensions of social capital
Alexandra Winkels
University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session V (D): Migration systems – Capital and business 1330-1500

This paper investigates the different functions of migrant networks at different stages of the migration process.
Migration processes are conceptually divided into three stages (a) decision making; (b) transition; and (c)
adaptation. Looking at migration as a spatial as well as a temporal process allows us to consider the role of social
capital in managing the risks and opportunities of mobility, and to gain a deeper understanding of migrant agency.
Based on a case study of internal migration in Vietnam the research shows that migrants are highly reliant on their
family and friends to access resources and information to reduce the challenges associated with moving, settling
and both accessing and maintaining income opportunities at the destination. This is particularly pertinent in the
context of Vietnam, where household registration and poverty combine to exclude many migrants from accessing
opportunities at their chosen destination. I argue that it is important to view the role of social capital over time,
and in parallel with economic and political changes, as relationships also change over time and space so that the
resources accessible through these social contacts do not always remain constant throughout the migration
process.
70 ‘Brain-gain' return of India’s high-skilled entrepreneurs: home, transformation, and power
politics in the cosmopolitan global south
Malasree Neepa Acharya1,2
1
Institute for European Studies, Brussels, Belgium, 2Settling Into Motion, Bucerius Foundation for Migration
Research, Hamburg, Germany
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session V (D): Migration systems – Capital and business 1330-1500

This paper investigates the impact of entrepreneurs of Indian origin as social and economic actors that are
choosing to return to emerging cities in India. I ask how do entrepreneurs of Indian origin who have lived for a
substantial time in the US and/or EU construct their lives upon returning to cosmopolitan cities in India and what
factors affect their actions. Entrepreneurs, self-employed owners, financers and managers of their own business
or enterprise, are a specific subset of high skilled migrants who take charge of their destinies. I theorize that
entrepreneurs— as a unique action-oriented subset of returning elites (Heberer 1999, Drucker 1975)—create
their work and home space as a reflection of their hybrid subjectivities and life experiences as cosmopolitan
‘expats.’ These elites transform physical infrastructures of home and work, and social relations among resident
Indians and fellow ‘expats’ within emerging Indian ‘Global South’ (Simone 2007, Dawson 2004) cities. The impact
of these transformations reconfigure the ways in which global elites move through the world—these
entrepreneurs largely redefine transnational networks across periphery and centre while actively creating their
own connection to cosmopolitan spaces globally.
Utilizing primary interview data and cognitive social networking ‘maps’ created by entrepreneurs that have
returned to Bangalore, India, an emerging ecosystem in India in the wake of globalization, I attempt to investigate
the subtext of entrepreneur respondent discussions of ‘opportunity’ and ‘innovation.’ I contend that entrepreneurs
who see their return as an opportunity to create a new venture or idea reflect a new cosmopolitan global citizenry
whose rootedness and creation of subjective selves within India reconfigures multinational movements and
settlement patterns of high skilled elites as part of a larger way in which they move through the world—thereby
retranslating transnational ties and engagements with settlement within spaces around the world.

71 How low-cost credit facilitates and sustains migration systems: evidence from Cambodia
Maryann Bylander
SOAS, London, UK
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session V (D): Migration systems – Capital and business 1330-1500

Contemporary studies of migration recognize that migrants often borrow money to finance their international
movements, and that debt may also motivate migration. Yet credit use/access is rarely problematized or critically
analysed for the role it plays in migration decision-making. Drawing on ethnographic data from a rural area of
Northwest Cambodia, this paper argues that expanded access to low-cost loans can facilitate, sustain and
promote migration systems. Specifically, the paper explores three pathways through which increased access to
credit played a key role in the development of a strong culture of migration in one area of rural Cambodia. These
findings suggest that access to low-cost credit can serve as an important feedback loop amplifying and facilitating
migration aspirations, and thus migratory systems.

72 Dislocating the local: a study of the migrants originating from the Indian enclaves
Sanghita Datta
Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session V (E): Social actors – Political contexts of action 1330-1500

Borders divide nations and with it, it also divides localities irrespective of class and religion. The partition of India
happened in two folds: firstly with Pakistan and secondly with Bangladesh. In this entire process of drawing and
re- drawing of borders the residue, in this entire process, are the inhabitants of borders. This has been a similar
experience in case of all those who have been uprooted due to war and have been displaced internally due to
various reasons. The Radcliffe Commission's ‘Blunder Line', demarcated the boundary line between India and
Pakistan-East and West Pakistan separately. It gave rise to a number of boundary disputes about the adversarial
possession of enclaves. The major bone of contention are the 106 enclaves (locally known as ‘chits') of India in
having a total area of 20,957.07 acres situated within Bangladesh (erstwhile East Pakistan).
This paper is an attempt to find answers to the big question of how and what motivated the inhabitants of the
Enclave region to migrate and how the actual migration cycle took place. Based on unstructured interviews and
mixed sampling techniques it traces the experiences of these migrants and there four decades of struggle to stay
in India, mostly without legal citizenship in the two bordering districts of West Bengal: Darjeeling and Coochbehar.
Set on the backdrop of partition, the experience of travelling back to the mainland as a complete ‘alien’ makes the
journey different and the settling process sets them apart from the rest of the migration taking place in the
country.

73 ‘Now smells like revolution': migrants' activism, subjectivities, and agency in


contemporary London
Gabriela Quevedo
University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session V (E): Social actors – Political contexts of action 1330-1500

Over the last sixty years London has transformed itself into a service based city where global economic forces
have developed an expanding low-paid economy that relies heavily on migrant labour (Sassen, 1991; quoted in
Evans et al., 2005). These historic and social processes have been the fertile ground of new forms of political,
social and cultural mobilisation often led by migrants. It is within this setting that my doctoral research seeks to
illuminate empirically the links between migrant's activism -as it comes into being- and the question of agency and
social change.
Using ethnographic data from my engagement with the 3cosas campaign at the University of London, I argue that
the epistemological premises of feminism, and in particular the notions of subjectivity and reflexivity can be
instrumental to develop a deeper understanding of how migrants in London have become authentic pioneers in
the resurgence of radicalised and somewhat unconventional forms of union activism (Seidman, 2011). I take a
‘carnal' approach to ethnography (Wacquant, 2005) that is grounded in my personal engagement as an activist in
the left wing London scene for more than three years. Departing from Bourdieu's concept of ‘habitus' as
methodological focus (Bourdieu, 1990), together with Touraine's theory of ‘the subject' (Touraine, 1995), this
paper hopes to provide some insights into the question of how activism ‘occurs', and the entangled articulations
between the migrants' sense of self in relation to their current positions (material and symbolic), and the marks of
their unique histories. This approach moves on from mono-causal understandings of collective action and seeks to
expand the traditional remit of current anthropological research by adopting a dialogic, bottom up methodology to
explain migrants' mobilisation (Pèro and Solomos, 2010).

74 The ‘Neogramscian approach’: using 'Critical Theories' to explain migration systems


Robert Westermann
BQN Berlin, Berlin, Germany
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session V (E): Social actors – Political contexts of action 1330-1500

Until now World System approaches, also known as Critical Theories, are mainly applied in International Relation
research. In the following I will illustrate on one example, the Neogramscian approach of Robert Cox, how global
correlations of social forces, forms of state and global orders profoundly affect International Migration processes
and should be considered by theoretical debates in Migration Studies. Furthermore, I will show how the specific
perspective of social transformation in combination with the awareness of local rescaling processes can be a
promising extension for the research of Migration Systems.

75 Mobilizing resources in transit: configurations of transnational social networks of African


migrants in Turkey and Greece
Marieke Wissink, Valentina Mazzucato
Maastricht University, Maastricht, The Netherlands
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session VI (A): Feedback – Networks 1530-1700

This paper critically analyses the nature of transnational social networks (TSN) and the value they have for
mobilizing resources for irregular migrants. TSN are commonly considered to constitute a major source of social
and economic capital to migrants, and a wealth of literature shows how the transnational circulation of resources,
or the absence thereof, impacts on the opportunities for migrants to realise migration objectives, particularly so
for irregular migrants with poor access to (non) governmental support. Less is known about the actual
configurations of TSN that migrants are engaged in. By using both ethnographic and social network data collected
among irregular African migrants residing in the transit contexts of Turkey and Greece, the paper investigates the
diversity of transnational network configurations, how these were formed, and how this diversity relates to
different ways in which migrants mobilise resources in order to facilitate processes of migration in transit. The
paper ultimately argues that understanding and distinguishing between network configurations is crucial to gain a
profound understanding of different ways in which resources circulate in migrants' TSN and accordingly affect
migration processes.

76 Pulling up the ladder? Migrants' choices about helping others migrate or not
Jørgen Carling, Jennifer Wu
Peace Research Institute Oslo, Oslo, Norway
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session VI (A): Feedback – Networks 1530-1700

Chain migration remains an essential element of migration, although its dynamics have changed over time. In the
past, networks may have been the only source of information about potential destinations. Today, information is
more widely accessible, but the regulatory obstacles to migration have given networks new roles. In a restrictive
migration regime, support from people at the destination becomes almost a prerequisite for migration.
As one migration scholar put it in the mid-1990s, settled migrants are becoming ‘gatekeepers' as much as
‘bridgeheads'. Settled migrants can enable the migration of others in diverse ways, including entering a marriage,
providing an employment contract, sponsoring a family visit, hosting someone without a residence permit, or
financing human smuggling. But under which conditions do migrants offer such help to others, and thereby
facilitate chain migration? And when do migrants choose to turn down request for help?
This paper uses a unique new data set from the project: Theorizing the Evolution of European Migration Systems
(THEMIS). The data covers twelve origin-destination pairs and survey interviews with a total of 2800 migrants.
Respondents come from Brazil, Morocco, and Ukraine and have migrated to the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal
and the United Kingdom. Data collection also comprised qualitative interviews; this data plays a smaller role in the
present paper and is used mainly for illustrative purposes.

77 From bridgeheads to gate closers: how migrant networks contribute to declining


migration from Morocco to the Netherlands
Erik Snel, Marije Faber, Godfried Engbersen
Erasmus University, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session VI (A): Feedback – Networks 1530-1700

Migration research offers abundant research and theories to describe and explain why migration flows, once
started, appear to have an inherent tendency to grow, but offers few insights why migration may also decline (De
Haas 2010). This paper focuses on an example of declining migration: migration from Morocco to the
Netherlands. Although the Netherlands houses a large Moroccan immigrant community (established by former
guest workers who arrived since the mid-1960s and their offspring) immigration from Morocco to the
Netherlands is steadily diminishing since the mid-1990s. One possible explanation of this decline in migration is
the diminishing support of settled Dutch-Moroccan migrants in the Netherlands to potential newcomers.
We try to explain these declining support intentions of Dutch-Moroccans in terms of their perception of the three
‘contexts of reception' of Portes: governmental policies, labour market changes and societal reception. Data from
420 Moroccan-born respondents living in and around the city of Rotterdam (the Netherlands) show that the
majority of them, although most of them received assistance from others during their own migration, do not
intent to support potential newcomers from Morocco. These declining intentions are partly explained by their
perception of a stricter migration policy in the Netherlands and the more hostile societal reception of Moroccans
in the Dutch public opinion. These figures clearly show that settled Dutch-Moroccans are not only selective
‘gatekeepers' anymore but in fact have inclined to be ‘gate closers'
78 Accounting for diversity in Polish migration in Europe: motivation and early integration
Renee Luthra2, Justyna Salamonska3, Lucinda Platt1
1
Institute of Education, London, UK, 2University of Essex, Colchester, UK, 3University G. D’Annunzio of Chieti,
Pescara, Italy
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session VI (B): Migration systems – Diversity of outcomes 1530-1700

Research on the decision to migrate overwhelmingly draws from neo-classical and revised economic models of
international flows, in which individuals and their families choose migration strategies to maximize and diversify
their incomes (Borjas, 1989) and reduce their exposure to financial risks (Taylor, 1999, Stark and Bloom, 1985).
Yet these models do little to explain the large amount of remaining variation in the type and size of migration
flows across receiving countries after the costs and benefits of migration are accounted for. We also know
relatively little about how non-economic determinants of migration impact the integration process of new
immigrants in the destination country. This paper examines cross-national variation in the non-economic
motivations and early integration of Polish immigrants to four Western Europe destinations: the UK, Ireland,
Germany and the Netherlands. We rely on a unique new data set that contains standardized measures of pre-
migration and post-migration characteristics among recent Polish migrants in all four countries, enhancing
comparability and sample size and reducing return-migration selection bias. Focusing only on Poles allows us to
control for many economic confounders in the relationship between non-economic migration determinants and
social and economic integration, because the legal and financial costs of migration from Poland to Western
Europe, as well as the potential wage returns, are fairly uniform across destination countries. Despite this seeming
interchange-ability, we show considerable variation in the size and socioeconomic characteristics of Polish
migration flows to these four countries. We link this variation to differences in the migration motives, pre-
migration social networks, and settlement intentions. Furthermore, we show that these non-economic variables
exert a significant impact on early socioeconomic integration in the destination countries, influencing the likelihood
of unemployment as well as occupational status and subjective life satisfaction of Polish immigrants within the
first 18 months after arrival.

79 Understanding new migrations in the enlarged Europe: the new migration system and the
emergence of multi-local inequalities
Anna Amelina
Goethe-University Frankfurt am Main, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session VI (B): Migration systems – Diversity of outcomes 1530-1700

Current studies of European migration provide evidence to the changing quality of migration flows after the EU
enlargement. In particular, migration is increasingly addressed as ‘liquid’ (Engbersen et al. 2000) and ‘incomplete’
(Iglicka 2000) mobility. Moreover, scholars emphasize two particular tendencies: on the one hand, migrant
populations from the new EU-member states tend to travel to the old member states on a temporary basis
(Engbersen et al. 2011). On the other hand, these (highly) skilled migrants often experience downward social
mobility in the labor markets of the destination countries (Favell 2008). Building on this diagnosis the contribution
addresses three aspects. First, how did the migration dynamics in Europe change after the EU enlargements?
What are the numbers and trajectories of new migrant populations? Second, how do migrants organize their
temporary living arrangements between the sending and receiving country? And what role do the EU mobility and
migration regulations play in this regard? Finally, the paper suggests addressing the migration between the new
and old EU member states as the formation of a new migration system. This innovative proposal modifies the
theory of migration systems since it suggests focusing not on the country pairs, but on the division between the
old and the new member states. In sum, the paper proposes a new contextualization of current migration flows
and illuminates the benefits of migration systems approach under new conditions of Europeanization.

80 Beyond migrant lives: the rise and fall of meso-level actors


Joana Sousa Ribeiro
CES, Center for Social Studies, Coimbra, Portugal
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session VI (B): Migration systems – Diversity of outcomes 1530-1700

This paper examines the migration from East European countries to Portugal as a particular pattern of the named
`southern European model´ (Baldin-Edwards, 1999; King, 2000). It discusses this sub-system through the
analysis of the emergence, development and decline of migratory dynamics. Biographic interviews to physicians
and nurses coming from Russia Federation, Moldova and Ukraine to Portugal are explored in order to sustain the
debate. These non-EU citizens arrived in Portugal without their credentials recognised before they left their
country of origin; as a consequence, they do not benefit from any professional, organizational, or supra-national
framework. The analysis of the East European doctors and nurses’ pioneer paths into the Portuguese Health
Service underlines the importance of multi-level actors: either as service providers (e.g. of language courses, of
training programs), as bridge-builders of social capital, as mentors for newcomers or as gatekeepers. The
biographic approach of this study allows perceiving the role of the initial movers on the sustainability of the flows.
Moreover, it contributes to emphasize the range of mechanisms that is on inter-play over time, namely, the ones
resulted from the interactions with state institutions, employers, educational establishments, professional
associations, NGO´s, Foundations, migrants fellows. This paper argues for the need to overcome the
structure/agency divide on the (re)valuation of the migratory dynamics.
Keywords: biographic methods, migration process, migration system, structure and agency.

81 Transformative stages of migrant identity: a diachronic and synchronic study of the first-
generation Romanian migrants in the UK
Oana Romocea
Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester, UK
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session VI (C): Social actors – Settlement 1530-1700

Part of my doctoral research, the present paper aims to explore how migrant identity transforms over time in
response to political and social changes. For the purpose of this study, I conducted in-depth interviews with first-
generation Romanian migrants settled in the UK over the last half a century. Using the timing and reason of their
relocation, I identified three sub-groups: pre-1989 political refugees, post-1989 knowledge diaspora and post-
1989 labour migrants. The study is both a diachronic and synchronic analysis which follows the identity
transformation, dynamism and re-adaptation of the Romanian migrant community.
I argue that political and social changes have led to major identity shifts within the migrant community at both
individual and collective level. If before the 1989 revolution, the Romanians settled in the UK had formed an active
diaspora, during the 1990s, they lost this status and became known as an immigrant community motivated by
aims of personal development. However, we have been witnessing a new transformative stage since 2007 when
Romania joined the European Union. The Romanians settled in the UK have again started displaying traits specific
to an incipient diaspora.
The study takes into account patterns of migrant integration in the context of everyday experiences in order to
understand how Romanians in Britain have, over time, delineated their relationship both to their homeland and the
host society across the transnational space of Europe. This interrelation is a dominant element of the diasporic
imagination of what it means to be Romanian, given the migration experience. Based on this analysis, my study will
reveal how the Romanian migrants responded to political and cultural changes, addressed identity crisis, adapted
to new contexts and reinvented themselves. All these processes are reflected in the transformation of their
migrant identity.

82 Migrants' organisations as identity creators: between integration and segregation. The


case of the Bulgarians in Valladolid, Spain
Alberto Alonso-Ponga García, María Jesús Pena Castro
Salamanca University, Salamanca, Spain
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session VI (C): Social actors – Settlement 1530-1700

The paper will discuss the role of the forerunners in the settlement patterns of the Bulgarian community in
Valladolid (Spain). Among the several examples that shows the importance of particular actors in the settlement
system of the whole community, we will focus on the role of the different associations involved in migrations
process, as well in the integration. Actually, these organisations operate themselves as social actors. Therefore, it
has been established a network of relations that developed an internal hierarchy during the last 12 years.
The initial initiative of an initially small group of people has crystallised in a genuine society that attracts a big
group of Bulgarians to the town. This organisation provides a social structure to the group of migrants, as well as a
starting point to build up an identity as community. Its influence in the Bulgarians’ settlement system has
surpassed the town to the closer villages nearby Valladolid. We will analyse how the role of the internal hierarchy is
especially relevant regarding the processes of integration and segregation in a permanent dialogue with the local
community. These organisations provide a social network that contributes to the socialization of the Bulgarians,
among them and with the local people. However, at the same time the sense of belonging to this group could be
seen as an obstacle to reach the integration into the local community. The paper will examine the dialectic of such
a process of integration and segregation, and the role of the societies in the generation of communal identities.
Keywords: migrants’ organisations, identity, settlement patterns, segregation and integration dynamics.

83 Citizens of Kazakhstan in a Russian city: factors facilitating and limiting transnational


activities (the case of Novosibirsk)
Larisa Kosygina
Institute of Economics (Siberian Branch of Russian Academy of Science), Novosibirsk, Novosibirsk region, Russia
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session VI (C): Social actors – Settlement 1530-1700

This paper discusses some results of my research, ‘Foreign citizens in the Novosibirsk region: factors for
construction of transnational practices’ undertaken within the collective research project, ‘Cross-border relations
in the Asian part of Russia: a comprehensive assessment of benefits and risks’ (funded by the Russian Academy of
Science). The paper is based on an analysis of semi-structured interviews with citizens of Kazakhstan residing in
Novosibirsk, which is the principal city of the region bordering Kazakhstan. It presents migrants’ understandings of
their migration process and factors facilitating or limiting their transnational activity (including transnational
migration). Both Russia and Kazakhstan participate in one migration system which emerged after the collapse of
the USSR. These countries are connected by a common history, cultural ties and social links, and continued mutual
economic interests. The recent introduction of the Common Economic Space – the economic and political union
which encompasses Russia, Kazakhstan, and Belarus – presupposes facilitation of migration and social integration
of the citizens of these countries across the covered territory. Citizens of Kazakhstan and Belarus can enter Russia
without a visa. In Russia, citizens of Belarus and Kazakhstan in comparison with other foreign citizens have the
greatest access to social and economic rights. Using the example of citizens of Kazakhstan residing in the region
which borders Kazakhstan, my research tries to clarify factors which promote or limit creation of a transnational
social space – a social space which is ‘composed from networks that link individuals to institutions in more than
one state” (Glick Shiller, in print) – from below, in other words, the creation of transnational space via the
activities of migrants themselves.
Glick Schiller, Nina, The Transnational Migration Paradigm: Global Perspectives on Migration Research – in print
(http://www.academia.edu/1613326/The_Transnational_Migration_Paradigm accessed on 14/01/2013)

84 Coercion and constraint in cumulative causation: forced migration and feedbacks in post-
invasion Iraq Coercion and constraint in cumulative causation: forced migration and
feedbacks in post-invasion Iraq (and tentative suggestions about cumulative causation in
Syria's displacements)
Ali Ali
London School of Economics, London, UK
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session VI (D): Migration systems – Conflict 1530-1700

Cumulative causation has been scrutinised in a range of migration contexts but is still under-explored in forced
migration. This paper will outline some of the ways in which the dynamics of cumulative causation influenced
migration decisions of Iraqis who left for Syria in the aftermath of occupation and sectarian conflict. It is migrant-
centred and based upon narrative interviews with Iraqis in Syria, collected during 2010 and 2011. It shows that in
a forced migration context, decisions to leave affected those who remained in coercive as well as facilitative ways.
We know that migration dynamics can facilitate future journeys but they can also coerce agents into migration.
Many who were left behind were pressured into leaving by the fear of family separation. Their resources were
depleted by the flight of social networks and the psycho-social resources associated with them. In confessionally
mixed neighbourhoods in Baghdad, militias with sectarian agendas were attempting to 'un-mix' parts of the city.
As neighbours from the same confessional affiliation departed under duress, this had powerful coercive effects on
families who were not personally threatened but thrown into a sense of insecurity which prompted decisions to
leave.
Cumulative causation also constrained migration as a result of feedback mechanisms. Households that were in
crisis and not in possession of significant material resources dared not risk leaving Iraq – they were alerted by
other migrants to the drain on resources that living in neighbouring countries like Jordan and Syria could be. Well
paid work was difficult to come by in those countries as their laws restricted the majority of Iraqis to working in
the informal economy. By examining how migrants experienced the coercive pressures of cumulative causation it
is also possible to reconsider other migrations affected by this dynamic and ask if they should be considered
'forced' in nature.

85 Egypt: migration, revolution, and social change


Philip Marfleet
University of East London, London, UK
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session VI (D): Migration systems – Conflict 1530-1700

For decades Egypt was a source country for migration to states of the Gulf. Now some of its poorest people leave
villages of the Nile Delta for the cities of Europe. Despite formal efforts by European authorities to inhibit these
networks, greatly increasing the risks for those involved, the pace of migration has intensified and cross-
Mediterranean networks have become integral to the life of some communities. This paper examines the rapid
emergence and consolidation of the new networks. It considers the development of new social practices
associated with migration and the complex outcomes for migrants and for those who do not migrate. The paper
also considers the impact of Egypt's revolution upon migration - the effect of societal upheaval and of a huge rise
in expectations of social and economic advance among millions of people. It argues that processes associated with
the ‘Arab Spring’ continue to stimulate cross-Mediterranean movements and to reshape regional patterns of
migration.

86 Elites and emulators: the evolution of an Iraqi Kurdish - European migration system
Erlend Paasche
Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO), Oslo, Norway
Day 3. Thursday 26 September: Parallel session VI (D): Migration systems – Conflict 1530-1700

This paper deals with both emigration and return, applying a systems approach on 'forced migrants'. Empirically
based on more than 100 in-depth interviews and 7 focus group discussions with Iraqi Kurdish emigrants and
returnees to/from the UK and Norway, this paper explores the evolution of an Iraqi Kurdish - European migration
system through three time periods, 1975-1991, 1992-1998, and 1999 until today. The first wave, comprised
of political elites, were often granted asylum by sympathetic host states in Europe. Through their existentially
important remittances, transnational marriages and high-profile return visits these elites had a signalling effect
triggering the emigration of a more mixed group of second-wave ‘economic refugees'. Second-wavers emulated
the first-wavers in search of wealth and freedom but were also fleeing a complex of civil war, generalized
insecurity and economic deprivation. The final third-wavers tend to be less wealthy and younger, and idealize
Europe as a vehicle of social mobility in lieu of inaccessible patronage. Unprecedented though incomplete political
stability and rapid though inequitable economic growth in Iraqi Kurdistan hence produces return and emigration
simultaneously. It prompts the return of political and financial elites, well positioned to capitalize on investment
opportunities and benefit from personal networks and any foreign-earned skills and education they might have
acquired. It also produces third wavers who continue to emulate the elites by seeking asylum in Europe to
accumulate wealth and enjoy social freedoms, but are poorly positioned to do so as increasingly restrictive asylum
regimes and economic downturns in Europe combine to produce irregularisation, marginalization, and
unfavourable exchange rates vis-à-vis the booming Kurdish economy. When these third-wavers eventually return,
often forcibly, they are largely empty-handed and face disappointed households and poor prospects in an
increasingly specialised labour market. In other words, emigration to Europe has been democratised but return has
not.
General information

Important numbers

Lady Margaret Hall Porters Lodge


24–hour general enquiries, support, and emergencies call: +44 (0) 1865 274300

THEMIS conference queries


Project Co-ordinator, Kate Prudden: +44 (0) 7580 104810 (mobile)

Emergency Services
If you are at Lady Margaret Hall contact the Porter’s Lodge in the first instance: +44 (0) 1865 274300
They will be best able to help liaise with the emergency services, as well as potentially find immediate support
from college first aiders or University security services.
Dial 999 if you are away from the college and need emergency assistance, whether fire/police/ambulance. You be
asked by the operator which of these services you need.

Computer information

Wifi access
All delegates will be provided with an individual wifi access code for use within Lady Margaret Hall. If you are
staying at the college the details will be given to you at check-in. Day delegates will receive their log-in details at
the conference registration desk.

Printing services
The Oxford Print Centre
36 Holywell Street
Oxford, OX1 3SB
Open Monday-Friday 9.00-17.00
+44 (0) 1865 240409
www.oxford-print-centre.co.uk/

Getting around

Taxis
The Porters can book a taxi for you, on request. To make a direct booking, some example local companies are:
001 Taxis: +44 (0) 1865 240000
ABC Radio Taxis: +44 (0) 1865 242424

Parking
Day time free parking is very limited in Oxford. Public transport, including the Park and Ride schemes, are
recommended. Some parking is available at the college, which may be booked in advance via the Porters Lodge.
You may park on the streets around the College overnight from 18.30 until 08.00 for free.
Social events

Conference dinner and drinks reception: Wednesday 25 September


This social event is limited to those delegates electing this option when they originally registered. They should
have received a conference pass with their delegate’s pack. Formal dress is not required. Pre-dinner drinks will be
served in the college gardens (or if wet weather, in Talbot Hall). The meal will follow directly afterwards, served in
the Deneke Dining Hall, Lady Margaret Hall.

Shopping
Main areas are in Oxford City centre – focused along Cornmarket Street, Queen Street and the High Street,
including the Westgate and Clarendon shopping centres, as well as the historic Covered Market.
Blackwell’s Bookshop (academic and educational materials), 48-51 Broad Street, might be of interest.

Chemist / pharmacy
The nearest chemist / pharmacy is located on Woodstock Road.
Woodstock Road Chemist
59 Woodstock Road
OX2 6HJ
Open Monday-Sunday 9.00-19.30
+44 (0) 1865 515226
Other chemists are located in Summertown or Oxford city centre.

Places of interest
Oxford Tourist Information office is at 15-16 Broad Street. +44(0) 1865 252200.
See the leaflet in your delegates’ pack for some highlighted places of interest.

Restaurants & dining out


Oxford has a wide variety of restaurants, bistros, cafes and pubs, serving food across a range of cuisines and
budget levels, as well as takeaway and fast-food outlets. The nearest restaurants to the college are in North
Parade Avenue, off Banbury Road. There are many also nearby in Summertown, Jericho and Oxford city centre.
The conference team will be happy to provide suggestions. You may also wish to consult the Oxford-based Daily
Info website, which provides information on different services, activities and events taking place in the city:
www.dailyinfo.co.uk/venues/restaurants.
Some suggestions are included on the next page.
Dining

Chinese / East Asian Mexican


Makan La The Mission Burrito
6-8 St Michael's Street 8 St Michael’s Street
Oxford OX1 2DU Oxford OX1 2DU
Tel: 01865 203222 Tel: 01865 202016
Noodlenation
Thai
100-101 Gloucester Green
Oxford OX1 2DF Bangkok House
Tel: 01865 201400
42A Hythe Bridge St
Oxford OX1 2EP
French Tel: 01865 200705
Brasserie Blanc Chiang Mai Kitchen
71-72 Walton Street 130a High St
Oxford OX2 6AG Oxford OX1 4DH
Tel: 01865 510999 Tel: 01865 202233
Café Rouge
British / Other
11 Little Clarendon Street
Oxford OX1 2HP Ashmolean Museum Café
Tel: 01865 310194
Beaumont Street
Oxford OX1 2PH
South Asian Tel: 01865 288183
Bombay The Gardeners Arms
82 Walton Street 39 Plantation Road
Oxford OX2 6EA Oxford OX2 6JE
Tel: 01865 511188 Tel: 01865 559814
Chutneys Jericho Café
St Michael’s Street 112 Walton Street
Oxford OX1 2EB Oxford OX2 6AJ
Tel: 01865 724241 Tel: 01865 310840
The Nosebag
Middle Eastern
6-8 St Michael’s Street
Al Salam Oxford OX1 2DU
6 Park End Street Tel: 01865 721033
Oxford OX1 1HH The Vaults Café
Tel: 01865 245710
University Church of St Mary High Street
Al Shami Oxford OX1 4AH
25 Walton Crescent
Oxford OX1 2JG
Tel: 01865 310066
MSC in Migration Studies

www.migration.ox.ac.uk/Msc-Migration-Studies.shtml
The interdisciplinary MSc in Migration Studies is jointly offered by the Oxford Department of International
Development and the School of Anthropology and Museum Ethnography. The course draws on the intellectual
resources of its two parent departments and the three world-leading migration research centres at Oxford: the
Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS), the International Migration Institute (IMI) and the Refugee
Studies Centre (RSC).
The programme allows students to explore human mobility in a global perspective, and to address the causes and
consequences of migration and how these are shaped by governments, societies, and migrants themselves. The
course lasts for ten months and normally admits around 26 students a year.
Staff teaching on the MSc in Migration Studies include:
Professor Bridget Anderson (COMPAS)
Dr Oliver Bakewell (IMI)
Dr Mette Louise Berg (COMPAS/Anthropology)
Professor Robin Cohen (IMI)
Dr Cathryn Costello (Law)
Dr Hein de Haas (IMI)
Dr Franck Düvell (COMPAS)
Dr Evelyn Ersanilli (IMI)
Dr Hiranthi Jayaweera (COMPAS)
Professor Michael Keith (COMPAS)
Dr Agnieszka Kubal (IMI)
Dr Martin Ruhs (COMPAS)
Dr Nando Sigona (RSC)
Dr Sarah Spencer, CBE (COMPAS)
Dr Nicholas Van Hear (COMPAS)
Dr Carlos Vargas-Silva (COMPAS)
Dr Xiang Biao (COMPAS)
The degree consists of four components, plus a dissertation:
 International Migration in the Social Sciences
 Migration, Globalisation and Social Transformation
 Thematic and Regional Options
 Methods in Social Research
Teaching on the degree is provided by leading scholars in the field and combines lectures, small tutorial groups and
discussion seminars. Students have individual dissertation supervision. Teaching is problem-focused and aims to
give students critical analytical skills. The course is assessed on the basis of one essay of 5,000 words; two
written exams; a portfolio of three pieces of coursework; and a dissertation of no more than 15,000 words.
We run a short, optional field trip to Istanbul each year – a focal point for many key issues in migration studies.
This is an opportunity to meet representatives from international and local NGOs, as well as Turkish scholars and
their students.
“The topic of migration is an infinitely complex one and the MSc in Migration Studies has strived to cover
this phenomenon from a variety of theoretical perspectives. I particularly enjoyed critical engagement with
key concepts utilized in migration studies, such as illegality, the nation, the state, mobility and development.
My experience on the MSc in Migration Studies has been on the whole a very positive one. The course
helped me develop both a holistic as well as a nuanced understanding of the many processes embedded in
migration.” — Suzana Carp, Graduated 2011
Author index

Name Paper Session Name Paper Session


Abel, Guy 39 Engbersen, Godfried 10
43 Keynote III
Acharya, Malasree Neepa 70 V(D)
77
Ali, Ali 84 VI(D)
Esteves, Alina 19
Alonso-Ponga García, Alberto 82 VI(C)
Ezzati, Rojan 23
Amelina, Anna 79 VI(B)
Faber, Marije 77
Baigent, Elizabeth 28 II(D)
Faist, Thomas 1 Keynote I
Bakewell, Oliver 2 Keynote I
Figueiredo, Ana Paula 14 I(D)
Bermudez, Anastasia 38 III(C)
Fischer, Carolin 25 II(C)
Boccagni, Paolo 17 II(A)
Fonseca, Maria Lucinda 19 II(A)
Borkert, Maren 8 I(B)
Frahm, Walker 62
Botterill, Katherine 13
Gabarrot, Mariana 61 V(A)
Brekke, Jan-Paul 40 III(D)
Geisen, Thomas 16 I(D)
Brochmann, Grete 40
Górny, Agata 20
Bylander, Maryann 71 V(D) 21 II(B)
Carling, Jørgen 76 VI(A) Hellgren, Tess 47 IV(B)
Carnet, Pauline 37 III(C) Hemmerechts, Kenneth 63
Carvalho, Rui 65 Horst, Cindy 4 Keynote II
Castagnone, Eleonora 12 I(C) 45 IV(A)
Chuang, Ya-Han 35 III(B) Iglesias, Juan 64 V(B)
Creighton, Mathew 36 III(C) Jolivet, Dominique 49 IV(B)
Curran, Sara 62 V(A) Kleinepier, Tom 11 I(C)
Czaika, Mathias 41 Koikkalainen, Saara 56 IV(D)
Datta, Sanghita 72 V(E) Kopecka, Liudmila 24 II(C)
David, Anda 31 III(A) Kosygina, Larisa 83 VI(C)
de clerck, Helene 63 Kubal, Agnieszka 45
60 V(A)
de Haas, Hein 5 I(A)
41 III(D) Kuschminder, Katie 58 IV(E)
Dekker, Rianne 10 I(B) La Spina, Encarnación 15 I(D)
Deleva, Živka 18 Lehmann, Uta 66 V(C)
de Valk, Helga 11 Lulle, Aija 68 V(C)
DeWaard, Jack 39 III(D) Luthra, Renee 78
Dias, Gustavo 53 IV(D) Marfleet, Philip 85 VI(D)
Dimitriadi, Angeliki 50 IV(C) Margheritis, Ana 34 III(B)
Name Paper Session Name Paper Session
Massey, Douglas 42 Keynote III Siqueira, Sueli 19
32
Mazzucato, Valentina 75
Snel, Erik 77 VI(A)
McGarrigle, Jennifer 19
Sousa Ribeiro, Joana 80 VI(B)
Mikes, Antonin 18 II(A)
Stones, Rob 13
Morawska, Ewa 3 Keynote II
Tarumoto, Hideki 6 I(A)
Moreh, Chris 57 IV(E)
Timmerman, Christiane 63 V(B)
Napierala, Joanna 20 II(B)
Toma, Sorana 12
Naqvi, Asjad 22
Tomei, Gabriele 52 IV(C)
Nifo, Annamaria 54 IV(D)
Tonhati, Tania 9 I(B)
O'Reilly, Karen 13 I(C)
Touquet, Heleen 48
Oucho, Linda 59 IV(E)
Tyldum, Guri 29 II(D)
Paasche, Erlend 86 VI(D)
van Gaalen, Ruben 11
Pardo Noteboom, Fabiola 55 IV(D)
Van Hear, Nick 44 IV(A)
Paul, Anju 26 II(C)
Vanore, Michaella 7
Pena Castro, María Jesús 82
Vecchione, Gaetano 54
Pereira, Sonia 32 III(A)
45 Vezzoli, Simona 33 III(B)
46 IV(A)
von Koppenfels, Amanda Klekowski 27 II(D)
Pereira, Sónia 19
Wahlbeck, Östen 30 III(A)
Pinelli, Barbara 51 IV(C)
Westermann, Robert 74 V(E)
Platt, Lucinda 78 VI(B)
Wets, Johan 48 IV(B)
Quevedo, Gabriela 73 V(E)
Willems, Roos 63
Rehm, Miriam 22 II(B)
Winkels, Alexandra 69 V(D)
Riosmena, Fernando 36
Wissink, Marieke 75 VI(A)
Romocea, Oana 81 VI(C)
Wu, Jennifer 23 II(B)
Salamonska, Justyna 78 76
Sampaio, Dora 65 V(B) Zurabishvili, Tamar 67 V(C)
Siegel, Melissa 7 I(A) Zurabishvili, Tinatin 67

Underlined paper numbers indicate paper presenter


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