The Demopaedia team will be present at the next International Population Conference in Busan.
If you attend the conference, please, come to our oral communication which will be held on Tuesday August 27, from 15:30 to 17:00 (Bexco, room 213). The new Korean dictionary will also be presented in a side meeting organized by the Planned Population Federation of Korea (PPFK) on "Population Issues & Official development assistance" (open to all) at 19:00 (Bexco, room 110).

Difference between revisions of "Migration network"

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Accumulation of social capital is the mechanism by which members of a community, potentially candidates for emigration, gain migration-related knowledge and resources through relatives or friends who have already traveled and moved to the destination area. Social networks also named migration networks<ref>{{Cite journal
+
ConnectedAccumulation of social capital is the mechanism by which members of a community, potentially candidates for emigration, gain migration-related knowledge and resources through relatives or friends who have already traveled and moved to the destination area. Social networks also named migration networks<ref>{{Cite journal
 
| volume = 2
 
| volume = 2
 
| pages = 699–708
 
| pages = 699–708
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}} </ref> lower the cost associated with migration by providing new migrants with information and help in finding work, shelter etc.
 
}} </ref> lower the cost associated with migration by providing new migrants with information and help in finding work, shelter etc.
  
The theory of migration networks doesn't play a major role when the size of the city of emigration is big<ref>{{Cite journal
+
The theory of migration networks doesn't play a major role when the size of the city of emigration is big<ref>{{Cite doi|10.1353/dem.2004.0003}} </ref>.
| volume = 41
 
| issue = 1
 
| pages = 151–171
 
| last = Fussell
 
| first = E.
 
| coauthors = D. S. Massey
 
| title = The limits to cumulative causation: international migration from Mexican urban areas
 
| journal = Demography
 
| accessdate = 2012-10-02
 
| date = 2004
 
| url = http://www.springerlink.com/index/D309508463714914.pdf
 
| doi = 10.1353/dem.2004.0003
 
| pmid = 15074129
 
}} </ref>.
 
  
 
<references />
 
<references />

Revision as of 11:44, 2 October 2012

ConnectedAccumulation of social capital is the mechanism by which members of a community, potentially candidates for emigration, gain migration-related knowledge and resources through relatives or friends who have already traveled and moved to the destination area. Social networks also named migration networks[1] lower the cost associated with migration by providing new migrants with information and help in finding work, shelter etc.

The theory of migration networks doesn't play a major role when the size of the city of emigration is big[2].

  1. Bustamante, J. A.; G. Jasso, J. E. Taylor, P. T. Legarreta (1998). "The selectivity of international labor migration and characteristics of Mexico-to-US migrants: Theoretical considerations". Migration between Mexico and the United States 2: 699–708. http://www.utexas.edu/lbj/uscir/binpapers/v2b-2bustamante.pdf. Retrieved 2012-10-01. 
  2. Fussell, E.; Massey, D. S. (2004). "The Limits to Cumulative Causation: International Migration from Mexican Urban Areas". Demography 41 (1): 151–71. doi:10.1353/dem.2004.0003. PMID 15074129.  edit