Subject: Economics and Finance Book Title: International Migration
International Migration
Prospects and Policies in a Global Market
Massey, Douglas S.
(Editor), Professor of Sociology and Public Policy at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public Policy and International Affairs
Princeton University
Taylor, J. Edward
(Editor), Professor of Agricultural and Resource Economics at the University of California
Davis
Print publication date: 2004
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: August 2004
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-926900-6
doi:10.1093/0199269009.001.0001
Abstract:
International migration emerged as a global phenomenon at the end of the twentieth century. All developed nations have become de facto receivers of immigrants, mostly from the developing world. Begins by undertaking a comprehensive examination of current patterns of international movement to assess prospects for the immediate future. Contrary to widespread belief, international migration is not related to population growth in developing nations. Rather, a survey of flows into the US, Europe, Argentina, and the newly industrialized countries of Asia suggest that it is more strongly connected to structural transformations associated with incorporation into global markets and is heavily conditioned by historical relationships of exchange, trade, and colonialism. The migration policies of developing nations recognize this fact by seeking to encourage and organize the export of labour as a source of foreign exchange earnings. In contrast, the policies of developed nations refuse to accept the reality of immigration and seek to prevent the entry of foreigners and limit their access to jobs and social programs. Whereas the former policies are often quite successful, the latter usually are not, producing a large gap between policy desires and outcomes in the developed world. Immigration is simply the labour component of a global market economy, and policy makers would do well to learn lessons from the prior era of globalization that occurred from 1800 to 1929. Policies that emphasize managing international population flows rather than preventing them are more likely to be successful.
14. Have the Occupational Skills of New Immigrants to the United States Declined Over Time? Evidence from the Immigrant Cohorts of 1977, 1982, and 1994
15. Admissions Policies in Europe
16. A New Paradigm for the European Asylum Regime
17. Immigrants and the Welfare State in Europe
18. The Legacy of Welfare Reform for U.S. Immigrants
19. Controlling International Migration through Enforcement: The Case of the United States