ABSTRACT

This book addresses a wide range of migration-related issues in the European context and examines the socioeconomic consequences of migratory flows throughout Europe, focusing on a number of emblematic European countries. The book is divided into three parts. The first part deals with the tension between migrants and their integration processes in the receiving country, which is deeply influenced by the attitude of the local population and the different approach to highly and less skilled immigrants. The second part analyses the impact of migration on the economic structure of the receiving country, while the third part explores the varying degree of immigrants’ socioeconomic integration in the country of destination.

The book offers an essential interdisciplinary contribution to the issue of migration and provides readers with a better understanding of the effects that different forms of migration have had and will continue to exert on economic and social change in host countries. It also examines migration policy issues and builds on historical and empirical case studies with policy recommendations on labour market, integration and welfare policy issues. The book is addressed to a wide audience, including researchers, academics and students of economics, sociology, politics and history, as well as government/EU officials working on migration topics.

part |24 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|11 pages

European Agenda on Migration between progress and challenges

Situational overview

chapter 2|11 pages

Migrants in Europe

From a production factor to social actors

part I|32 pages

Immigrants and the labour market

chapter 3|7 pages

Hostility in times of labour shortage

Controversial attitudes towards labour immigration in Hungary

chapter 4|23 pages

Is talent divide a proper form with which to characterize contemporary migration flows?

Evidence from the Portuguese emigration within the European Union

part II|76 pages

Immigrants

chapter 5|24 pages

An economic resource or a social problem?

European institutions and migrants from the 1950s to the 1970s: the case of Belgium

chapter 6|30 pages

Chinese immigrant entrepreneurs in Italy and England

The cases of Bologna and London

part III|95 pages

Immigrant networks, well-being and education

chapter 8|38 pages

Blood, buddies, banks

Potential funding sources for starting a new business as perceived by Maghrebi, Filipino and Chinese immigrants in Italy

chapter 9|27 pages

Mothering from afar

The subjective well-being of Eastern European migrants in Italy

chapter 10|28 pages

Free or bounded?

Migration, ethnicity, social background and educational choices in four European countries