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Turkish emigration and its implications for the sending and receiving countries
Ahmet İçduygu Wiebke Sievers ; Michael Bommes ; Heinz Fassmann
Migration from the Middle East and North Africa to Europe, 2014, p.99
Amsterdam University Press
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Title:
Turkish emigration and its implications for the sending and receiving countries
Author:
Ahmet İçduygu
Wiebke Sievers
;
Michael Bommes
;
Heinz Fassmann
Subjects:
Behavioral sciences
;
Children
;
Citizenship
;
Civics
;
Communities
;
Countries
;
Economic disciplines
;
Economic migration
;
Economics
;
Emigration
;
Employment
;
Human geography
;
Human migration
;
Human populations
;
Human societies
;
International migration
;
Labor economics
;
Labor migration
;
Migrant communities
;
Persons
;
Political geography
;
Political migration
;
Political science
;
Population studies
;
Return migration
;
Scope of employment
;
Social groups
;
Social sciences
;
Sociology
;
Unemployment
Is Part Of:
Migration from the Middle East and North Africa to Europe, 2014, p.99
Description:
Social researchers have dealt with the effect of international migration at three different levels: sending countries, receiving countries and migrants. Generally speaking, the tendency has been to address this issue from a rather limited perspective, focusing largely on the receiving countries, sometimes on the sending countries, and occasionally on the migrants themselves, but only rarely on these three actors of migratory flows together. Some refocusing would therefore seem to be in order. We need to know more than we do about the consequences of migration on the individual countries (both sending and receiving) and on migratory systems in general. This
Publisher:
Amsterdam University Press
Language:
English
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