Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy
Volume 2, Issue 4, 1984, Pages 383-398
Dilemmas in international migration: a global perspective. (Article)
Papademetriou D.G.
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a
Dept. of Political Science, the New School for Social Research, 65 Fifth Avenue, New York 10003, USA., United States
Abstract
The impacts of the international migration process both on receiving and on sending societies are evaluated. For the former, the issue has become increasingly politicized and a mood of restriction is in evidence. This mood, in turn, and the policies which it spawns, clashes with the interests of individuals and of state actors among the less-developed countries who seek to expand access to 'desirable' destinations among advanced industrial societies - in spite of mounting evidence that emigration, in its current forms, has only marginally positive developmental effects. International migration is placed in a theoretical context through a discussion of the strengths and weakness of two major competing schools: the classical-liberal one and the Marxist-neo-Marxist one. For labor importers, resort to international migration has been a tentative economic success, though, increasingly, a social and political liability. Results are equally mixed for labor senders. Policy recommendations focus mostly on avenues through which the costs of the migration process can be contained while the benefits are enhanced. -Author
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0021639212&doi=10.1068%2fc020383&partnerID=40&md5=8e3aae9b75839eeb3a6d54760f9768ae
DOI: 10.1068/c020383
Cited by: 2
Original Language: English