International Migration
Volume 35, Issue 3, 1997, Pages 337-360

The consequences of international migration for the status of women: A Turkish study (Article)

Day L.H. , Içduygu A.
  • a [Affiliation not available]
  • b Bilkent University, Ankara, Turkey

Abstract

As part of a larger inquiry into the consequences of international migration for those who remain in the country of origin, 234 adults in four Turkish provinces were interviewed concerning matters (mostly opinions) pertaining to the status of women. Three migrant-status categories were defined; (a) Returned migrants, (b) Non-migrant close kin or friends of migrants, and, as a control group, (c) All others. Controlling for age, sex, urban-rural residence, and schooling, group (a) was the most likely to express"non-traditional" views, and group (c) the least. Group (b) was in between. Of the two possible explanations for such a pattern - recruitment and socialization - we found recruitment highly significant. The evidence for socialization, however, was decidedly mixed. Some of the considerable diversity of viewpoints pertaining to the status of women found in this inquiry are doubtless causally associated with the experience of migration, whether direct or indirect. But there is also evidence here of a society in the process of rapid change; and it is these more general social changes, not migration as such, that would appear to be more likely to affect the status of women. There is little support for the contention that the type of international migration that has involved so many Turks these past three decades - migration that has for the most part been temporary and economically motivated and has consisted of movement from relatively poor agricultural or but slightly industrialized areas to rich, highly industrialized ones characterized by marked differences in language, religion, and overall culture - is going to result in moving the status of women from a more to a less "traditional" plane.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

information processing Studies Research Methodology economics population methodology demography Surveys developing country Population Dynamics Sampling Studies Research Report Developing Countries epidemiology Women's Rights Asia Turkey (republic) Western Asia Asia, Western Mediterranean Countries Socioeconomic Factors Migrants--women socioeconomics Article migration international migration Turkey Demographic Factors research Women's Status Emigration and Immigration Economic Factors Transients and Migrants migration impact Data Collection gender perspective

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0031418855&partnerID=40&md5=894494dc529c67394573e407e99add6e

ISSN: 00207985
Cited by: 20
Original Language: English