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Continental Divides: International Migration in the Americas (Hardcover)
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Continental Divides: International Migration in the Americas (Hardcover)
Series: The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Since Mexico-U.S. migration represents the largest sustained
migratory flow between two nations worldwide, much of the
theoretical and empirical work on migration has focused on this
single case. In the last few decades, however, migration has
emerged as a critical issue across all nations in Latin America and
the Caribbean, with the region seeing its position changed from a
net migrant-receiving region to one that now stands as one of the
foremost sending areas of the world. In this latest volume of the
ANNALS, leading migration scholars seek to redress the imbalance
offered when only studying a single case with the first systematic
assessment of Latin American migration patterns using ongoing
research on the Mexican case as a basis for comparison. Each
chapter examines specific propositions or findings derived from the
Mexican case that have not yet been tested for other Latin American
or Caribbean nations. Using a common framework of data, methods,
and theories, they offer a new perspective on the causes and
consequences of migration in the Western Hemisphere. The authors
examine four fundamental questions: What are the individual
determinants and basic processes of movement? How do we identify
and understand the larger structural causes that ultimately
underlie individual and household decisions to move? What are the
consequences of migration for individuals, households, and
communities in sending and receiving nations? And what effect do
governmental attempts to control the quantity and quality of
immigrants have on the actual size and composition of the resulting
international flows? Using comparable data from the Mexican
Migration Project (MMP) and the Latin American Migration Project
(LAMP), the most comprehensive and reliable source of data on
immigration from Latin America and the Caribbean, the volume offers
valuable insight into 118 Mexican communities and 35 communities
from seven other nations of Latin America and the Caribbean,
including Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Peru, Paraguay, Argentina, Haiti,
and the Dominican Republic, as well as Puerto Rico. In this volume,
comparative research is shown to be critical to building an
accurate theoretical and substantive understanding of migration.
Through the authors' findings, we are shown what is possible when
researchers are able to draw on a common source of comparable data
to study migratory decision-making and outcomes across diverse
origin countries. Specific outcomes help the authors to identify:
common characteristics of pioneer migrants; gender effects on
migration; the role that political shocks and violence can play in
promoting emigration during times of political and economic
transition; differences in the education profiles of emigrants from
Latin American countries that lie at different ends of the migrant
selectivity continuum; the important influence of remittances sent
home by migrants and the migrants' occupational prospects once they
return home; and the effect of U.S. immigration policies on the
behavior and characteristics of immigrants. This comparative
approach to the study of migration represents a unique and
innovative contribution to scholarship on international migration-a
topic of considerable interest in the twenty-first century.
Political scientists, sociologists, and policy-makers will find
much value in these compelling and timely readings. For all social
scientists who are interested in ethnic studies and migration, this
volume provides inspiration for future research.
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