ABSTRACT

This revised and expanded second edition of Routledge International Handbook of Migration Studies provides a comprehensive basis for understanding the complexity and patterns of international migration. Despite increased efforts to limit its size and consequences, migration has wide-ranging impacts upon social, environmental, economic, political and cultural life in countries of origin and settlement. Such transformations impact not only those who are migrating, but those who are left behind, as well as those who live in the areas where migrants settle.

Featuring forty-six essays written by leading international and multidisciplinary scholars, this new edition showcases evolving research and theorizing around refugees and forced migrants, new migration paths through Central Asia and the Middle East, the condition of statelessness and South to South migration. New chapters also address immigrant labor and entrepreneurship, skilled migration, ethnic succession, contract labor and informal economies. Uniquely among texts in the subject area, the Handbook provides a six-chapter compendium of methodologies for studying international migration and its impacts.

Written in a clear and direct style, this Handbook offers a contemporary integrated resource for students and scholars from the perspectives of social science, humanities, journalism and other disciplines.

part I|78 pages

Theories and histories of international migration

part II|53 pages

Displacement, refugees and forced migration

chapter 7|9 pages

Forced migrants

Exclusion, incorporation and a moral economy of deservingness

chapter 9|8 pages

Country of first asylum

chapter 11|13 pages

Climate change and human migration

Constructed vulnerability, uneven flows, and the challenges of studying environmental migration in the 21st century

part III|66 pages

Migrants in the economy

chapter 12|16 pages

Unions and immigrants

chapter 14|14 pages

High-skilled migration

chapter 16|11 pages

Vulnerability to exploitation and human trafficking

A multi-scale review of risk

part IV|59 pages

Intersecting inequalities in the lives of migrants

chapter 18|13 pages

Nativism

A global-historical perspective

chapter 19|10 pages

Gender and migration

Uneven integration

chapter 21|12 pages

Migrants and indigeneity

Nationalism, nativism and the politics of place

part V|63 pages

Creating and recreating community and group identity

chapter 22|11 pages

Panethnicity

chapter 24|12 pages

Religion on the move

The place of religion in different stages of the migration experience

chapter 25|12 pages

Condemned to a protracted limbo?

Refugees and statelessness in the age of terrorism

chapter 26|16 pages

Reclaiming the black and Asian journeys

A comparative perspective on culture, class, and immigration

part VI|41 pages

Migrants and social reproduction

chapter 27|14 pages

Immigrant and refugee language policies, programs, and practices in an era of change

Promises, contradictions, and possibilities

chapter 28|12 pages

Immigrant intermarriage

chapter 29|13 pages

International adoption

part VII|118 pages

Migrants and the state

chapter 32|22 pages

Naturalization and nationality

Community, nation-state and global explanations

chapter 34|15 pages

Immigration and education

chapter 36|13 pages

International migration and the welfare state

Connections and extensions

part VIII|53 pages

Maintaining links across borders

chapter 39|13 pages

Transnationalism

chapter 40|11 pages

Survival or incorporation?

Immigrant (re)integration after deportation

chapter 41|13 pages

Return migration

part IX|69 pages

Methods for studying international migration

chapter 42|14 pages

Census analysis

chapter 43|12 pages

Binational migration surveys

Representativeness, standardization, and the ethnosurvey model

chapter 44|17 pages

Interviewing immigrants and refugees

Reflexive engagement with research subjects