Does migration lead to development? Or is it contributing to a global divide?
Publication date
2012
Authors
Zoomers, E.B.
Nijenhuis, G.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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License
(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2012
Abstract
This article aims to show that the benefits of international migration (often presented as a ‗global flow‘) very much depend on the positionality of the areas involved, as well as the regional particularities. It is argued that countries producing south-north migration or diasporic states are in a more favorable position to benefit from international migration than countries that are mainly involved in south-south migration. In addition, the opportunity to benefit from international migration very much depends on geographical particularities. For example, international migration in the context of Latin America/USA is in many respects not comparable to what is happening in Africa, Asia, the EU and the Gulf States. Even though international migration is often described in terms of a growing connectedness in the age of globalization, it progresses also hand in hand with new gaps and regional divides.
Keywords
international migration, development, south-north migration, south-south migration, diasporic states, migration flows, regional differences