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Showing 1 to 15 of 44 results Save | Export
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Natalia Tsybuliak; Hanna Lopatina; Liudmyla Shevchenko; Anastasia Popova; Yana Suchikova – SAGE Open, 2024
This study examines the impact of migration processes on burnout among Ukrainian university academic staff during the full-scale war. A survey involving 836 participants from 164 higher education institutions revealed that 37% of respondents became forced migrants, either internally (24%) or externally (13%). Significant connections were found…
Descriptors: War, Professional Personnel, Higher Education, Mobility
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Tajibayeva, Zhibek; Nurgaliyeva, Saniya; Aubakirova, Kymbat; Ladzina, Natalya; Shaushekova, Bayan; Yespolova, Gulden; Taurbekova, Ainur – International Journal of Education in Mathematics, Science and Technology, 2023
The aim of this study is to examine the psychological, pedagogical and technological adaptation levels of repatriated students studying at different universities in Kazakhstan with a comparative and relational approach. In the research, since it is aimed to determine the psychological, pedagogical and technological adaptation levels of the…
Descriptors: College Students, Foreign Countries, Relocation, Adjustment (to Environment)
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Sarah Craycraft; Petya V. Dimitrova – Journal of Folklore and Education, 2024
Often, migrants relocate because of acute disruption: war, disaster, or persecution. Slower forms of violence, however, can lead to lifestyle migration, at once a response to nostalgia and an unsatisfying present. Some young urbanites in Bulgaria seek new possibilities in heavily depopulated rural settings. While rural revitalization is generally…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Urban to Rural Migration, Relocation, Rural Areas
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Shirazi, Roozbeh – Comparative Education Review, 2022
The lives of minoritized migrant youth are marked--although distinctly--by histories and contemporary practices of exclusion. As subjects who are refused (or refuse) recognition as members of settler-colonial or postcolonial states, these youth often contend with disaffection within the spaces where their lives unfold. Informed by a research…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Scholarship, Minority Groups
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Carroll, Sean – Creighton Journal of Interdisciplinary Leadership, 2019
Hadfield's "Rules for a Flat World" describes how today's legal infrastructure harms people globally who live in the "Bottom of the Pyramid" (BoP). People who pass through the Kino Border Initiative on the U.S.- Mexico border provide vivid and personal examples of how lack of robust legal infrastructure contributes to acute…
Descriptors: Migrants, Foreign Countries, Immigration, Relocation
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Tejendra Pherali; Min Layi Chan; Wirachan Charoensukaran; Elaine Chase; Eileen Kennedy; Greg Tyrosvoutis; Gabi Witthaus; Diana Laurillard – Journal of Interactive Media in Education, 2025
Educational providers frequently respond to learning disruptions encountered by refugees, internally displaced persons, and migrant communities through online platforms. Learning modules in these digital spaces are often remotely designed, prescriptive and lack full appreciation of challenging circumstances faced by teachers and learners. To…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Relocation, Refugees, Teacher Response
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Maemeko, Eugene; Mukwambo, Muzwa; Nkengbeza, David – Journal of Curriculum and Teaching, 2021
The purpose of this article was to find out social challenges learners residing in informal settlements in Katima Mulilo Town face. Informal settlements crop up as people move from rural settings to urban areas as they seek better facilities, a process known as urbanisation. However, not all who migrate into urban areas end up getting the required…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Barriers, Social Influences, Migrants
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Maber, Elizabeth J. T. – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2016
Political oscillations in Myanmar and Thailand, between militarisation and democratic reform, have prompted a rapid renegotiation of the alignments, goals and priorities of non-state education providers, both international and community-based, along the two countries' border. This paper explores the responses to shifts in political environment…
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Social Change, Educational Change, Conflict
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Li, Xuemei; Que, Hua – FIRE: Forum for International Research in Education, 2016
Faced with a labor shortage and low profile of diversity, the province of Newfoundland and Labrador in Canada has been making an effort to attract and retain newcomers. Guided by Bronfenbrenner's (1979) ecological systems theory, this qualitative study investigates the challenges faced by newcomer youth, including permanent residents coming as…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Youth Opportunities, Migrants, Qualitative Research
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Guy, Roger – Journal of Appalachian Studies, 2012
Uptown, on Chicago's north side, was home to thousands of Appalachian migrants in the 1960s. Known fondly as Hillbilly Heaven for the numerous honky-tonk bars, and concentration of southern whites, Uptown was eyed for urban renewal by an elite group of business owners and civic leaders who referred to it as the Hillbilly Ghetto. This group…
Descriptors: Urban Areas, Neighborhoods, Migrants, Relocation
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Hernandez, Jose Angel – Aztlan: A Journal of Chicano Studies, 2010
The contemporary situation in the United States with respect to Mexican migrants has reached a level of intensity that harkens back to the mass expulsions of the 1930s and the 1950s, when millions were forcefully removed south across the border. Recent deportation raids have targeted food processing plants and other large businesses hiring migrant…
Descriptors: Mexicans, Migrants, United States History, Relocation
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McLachlan, Debra A. – Journal of Research in International Education, 2007
In a global society, internationally mobile (IM) families experience challenges as well as benefits while living a transient lifestyle. Considering the human costs of relocation and transience for IM families, it is important to understand their survival strategies. A qualitative research approach was used to study 45 IM families who had children…
Descriptors: International Schools, Foreign Countries, Mobility, Migrants
Rogge, John R. – 1981
A significant component of modern migrants are refugees or displaced persons. Historically, most involuntary migrants readily found permanent asylum in the traditional immigrant receiving countries of the New World. This situation is changing. Source areas of refugees have shifted from the European arena to the Third World, and the causes of…
Descriptors: Definitions, Economic Factors, Legal Problems, Migrants
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Barrett, Frank – Environment and Behavior, 1976
This study examines the search behavior of 380 intra-urban residential migrants, who were interviewed within four months of moving to a new location. Data on all houses searched are included, as well as the actual house selected. The results indicate residential search behavior is a minimizing process. (BT)
Descriptors: Behavior, Behavioral Science Research, Environment, Housing
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Kiker, B. F.; Traynham, Earle C. – Growth and Change, 1977
The study determined: if there were economic and/or demographic differences between them which existed prior to out-migration; what were the actual earnings differences between cohorts of return and nonreturn migrants following their migration; and if return migrants experienced an improvement or worsening in earnings relative to cohorts of…
Descriptors: Age, Cohort Analysis, Demography, Income
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