ABSTRACT

This book examines international out-migration from North India, focusing on the state of Punjab. It is the first-ever empirical exploration of the causes, processes, patterns and consequences of international out-migration based on a robust sample of 10,000 households drawn from both rural and urban areas. The volume explores a range of issues such as current migration, return migration, remittances, reverse remittances, diaspora philanthropy, migration consultancy services, international marriages, campaigns for safe migration abroad and plans for emigration in future. It also addresses questions surrounding the use of paid labour by households to replace the work done by the emigrants and studies villages as the migration setting. Additionally, the book organically links to a well-spread-out and vibrant Punjabi diaspora, as well as providing viable baseline data on a range of indicators.

 

A key text on migration studies, this volume will be of great interest to scholars and researchers of development studies, economics, demography, sociology, social anthropology and diaspora studies.

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|21 pages

Survey Design and Implementation

chapter 4|46 pages

International Out-Migration

chapter 5|50 pages

Return Migration

chapter 6|32 pages

Remittances

chapter 7|4 pages

Migrants' Philanthropy

chapter 8|10 pages

Cross-Border Marriages

chapter 9|13 pages

Role of Migration Consultancy

chapter 10|3 pages

Undocumented and Safe Migration

chapter 11|5 pages

Future Plans for Emigration

chapter 12|28 pages

Migration as a Rural Phenomenon

A migration profile of the villages of Punjab

chapter 13|10 pages

Summary and Conclusions