Publication Date
In 2025 | 0 |
Since 2024 | 0 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 0 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 0 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 10 |
Descriptor
Immigration | 16 |
Foreign Countries | 10 |
Immigrants | 10 |
Ethnicity | 4 |
Labor Market | 3 |
Metropolitan Areas | 3 |
Mexican Americans | 3 |
Mexicans | 3 |
Migration Patterns | 3 |
Unemployment | 3 |
Urban Areas | 3 |
More ▼ |
Source
Social Forces | 16 |
Author
Publication Type
Journal Articles | 16 |
Reports - Research | 9 |
Reports - Evaluative | 5 |
Reports - Descriptive | 2 |
Audience
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Bachmeier, James D. – Social Forces, 2013
This article applies the tenets of Massey's (1999) cumulative causation theory of migration to explain variation in aggregate patterns of Mexican migration to U.S. metropolitan destinations during the late 1990s. Analogous to sending contexts, results suggest that the dynamics of migration vary substantially with the maturity of the Mexican…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Maturity (Individuals), Housing, Mexican Americans
Waldinger, Roger; Soehl, Thomas – Social Forces, 2013
International migration yields pervasive cross-border social engagements, yet homeland political involvements are modest to minimal. This contrast reflects the ways in which the distinctive characteristics of expatriate political life impede participation in the polity that emigrants have left behind. As polities are bounded, moving to the…
Descriptors: Mexican Americans, Citizen Participation, Immigration, Conflict Resolution
Hamilton, Erin R.; Villarreal, Andres – Social Forces, 2011
Past research on international migration from Mexico to the United States uses geographically-limited data and analyzes emigrant-sending communities in isolation. Theories supported by this research may not explain urban emigration, and this research does not consider connections between rural and urban Mexico. In this study we use national data…
Descriptors: Labor Market, Foreign Countries, Immigration, Mexicans
Shihadeh, Edward S.; Barranco, Raymond E. – Social Forces, 2010
U.S. immigration policies after 1965 fueled a rise in the Latino population and, thus, increased the competition for low-skill jobs. We examine whether Latino immigration and Latino dominance of low-skill industries increases black urban violence. Using city-level data for the year 2000, we find that (1. Latino immigration is positively linked to…
Descriptors: Immigration, Immigrants, Hispanic Americans, Unemployment
Sanderson, Matthew R.; Kentor, Jeffrey D. – Social Forces, 2009
It is widely argued that globalization and economic development are associated with international migration. However, these relationships have not been tested empirically. We use a cross-national empirical analysis to assess the impact of global and national factors on international migration from less-developed countries. An interdisciplinary…
Descriptors: Economic Development, Context Effect, Developing Nations, Immigration
Kesler, Christel – Social Forces, 2006
I examine patterns of joblessness among immigrant men and women from 33 countries of origin now living in Britain, Germany and Sweden. Access to welfare, access to the labor market, job segregation and institutional support for women's employment define distinct policy configurations in these three destinations. Findings show that gaps in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Labor Market, Immigration
Hagan, Jacqueline – Social Forces, 2006
One of the defining characteristics of the late 20th and early 21st centuries is the increasing importance of international migration, an epoch Castles and Miller term the "age of migration." The precise size of the international migrant population is unknown. Much of this movement--such as unauthorized and other irregular flows--is not…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Foreign Countries, Institutional Characteristics, Economic Opportunities
Lee, Jennifer; Bean, Frank D. – Social Forces, 2007
Contemporary nonwhite immigration from Latin America and Asia, increasing racial/ethnic intermarriage, and the growing number of multiracial individuals has made the black-white color line now seem anachronistic in America, consequently raising the question of whether today's color line is evolving in new directions toward either a white-nonwhite…
Descriptors: Racial Differences, African American Students, Foreign Countries, Self Concept
Dinovitzer, Ronit; Hagan, John; Levi, Ron – Social Forces, 2009
This research focuses on immigration and youthful illegalities in the Toronto area, one of the world's most ethnically diverse global cities. While current research documents a negative relationship between crime and immigration, there is little attention to individual level mechanisms that explain the paths through which immigrant youth refrain…
Descriptors: Immigration, Immigrants, Crime, Foreign Countries
Lee, Cheol-Sung – Social Forces, 2005
This article, using unbalanced panel data on 16 affluent OECD countries, tests the effects of diverse aspects of globalization and deindustrialization on unionization trends. In contrast to the recent studies focusing on the conditional role of labor market institutions, this study underlines the role of two structural factors in transforming…
Descriptors: Globalization, Foreign Countries, Occupational Mobility, Unions

Kandel, William; Massey, Douglas S. – Social Forces, 2002
Examines a Mexican "culture of migration," in which U.S. migration becomes an expectation for young people. Among approximately 7,000 secondary students surveyed in Zacatecas (Mexico), adolescents from families involved in U.S. migration were more likely to aspire to live and work in the United States, increasing the likelihood they…
Descriptors: Aspiration, Family Influence, Foreign Countries, Immigration
Small, Mario Luis; McDermott, Monica – Social Forces, 2006
Wilson (1987) and others argue that poor neighborhoods lack important organizational resources the middle class takes for granted, such as childcare centers, grocery stores and pharmacies. However, this approach does not distinguish poor neighborhoods from segregated neighborhoods, ignores immigration and neglects city differences. Using…
Descriptors: Neighborhoods, Middle Class, Poverty, Economically Disadvantaged
Frank, Reanne; Wildsmith, Elizabeth – Social Forces, 2005
This article provides an empirical test of the widely accepted assumption that migration contributes to union instability. The data come from the Mexican Migration Project (MMP) data base MMP93. We use multilevel discrete time event history analysis to specify the odds of union dissolution for male household heads by individual- and…
Descriptors: Social Control, Divorce, Foreign Countries, Migration Patterns
Orum, Anthony M. – Social Forces, 2005
Research into immigration has for many years focused most of its attention on the issue of how immigrants adapt to host societies. This tendency is especially true in the work of sociologists. Yet if we acknowledge the growing ethnic diversity today in the United States and elsewhere, the most interesting questions arise as to how immigrants…
Descriptors: Ethnic Groups, Immigration, Immigrants, Ethnicity
Tubergen, Frank van – Social Forces, 2005
This study examines the role of immigrants' country of origin, country of destination and combinations thereof (settings or communities) in the likelihood of immigrants being self-employed. I pooled census data from three classic immigrant countries (Australia, Canada and the United States) and labor-force surveys from 14 countries in the European…
Descriptors: Self Employment, Immigrants, Role, Foreign Countries
Previous Page | Next Page ยป
Pages: 1 | 2