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JournalISSN: 2057-049X

Asian and Pacific Migration Journal 

SAGE Publishing
About: Asian and Pacific Migration Journal is an academic journal published by SAGE Publishing. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Population & Immigration. It has an ISSN identifier of 2057-049X. Over the lifetime, 747 publications have been published receiving 10437 citations. The journal is also known as: APMJ.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors contribute to the development of an analytical framework that provides the space for the understanding of female migrants as reproductive workers in a cross-national transfer of labor.
Abstract: This paper aims to contribute to the development of an analytical framework that provides the space for the understanding of female migrants as reproductive workers in a cross-national transfer of labor. It will first provide some hypothetical guidelines for the explanation of female migration in the context of reproductive labor. Based on accessible data a discussion on the case of Japan will be presented to highlight the main issues and problems concerning female migrants as reproductive workers. Finally implications on policy-making and networking at the international and national level will be analyzed and discussed taking into account the specific ideological political and socioeconomic constraints. (EXCERPT)

155 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors draw upon various studies of internal and international migration and permanent and temporary movements to assess the diverse effects of migration on families in Indonesia, including those on family structure and composition, family headship, marriage and divorce, intergenerational and intrafamily relationships, care of children and the aged, economic situation of the family, the role and status of women and power relationships in the family.
Abstract: This paper draws upon various studies of internal and international migration and permanent and temporary movements to assess the diverse effects of migration on families in Indonesia. The types of effects examined include those on family structure and composition, family headship, marriage and divorce, intergenerational and intrafamily relationships, care of children and the aged, the economic situation of the family, the role and status of women and power relationships in the family. Both migration and the family are in a very dynamic situation and there are important two-way relationships between them. International migration has both positive and negative influences on families in Indonesia. It is important to gain a deeper understanding of the relationship between migration and family to maximize the benefits and at least ameliorate the negative effects.

139 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The characteristics of Asian female labor migration are described, policy dimensions are examined and action is suggested to bridge the gaps between policy dimensions and implementation.
Abstract: "The feminization of women in international labor migration has been most pronounced in the case of Asia, with women moving in their own right as economic migrants and faced with regulatory and social constraints, gender discrimination and exploitation in countries of origin and destination. Asian countries, both sending and receiving, have been experimenting with gender-sensitive migration policies and programs. This paper describes the characteristics of Asian female labor migration, examines policy dimensions and suggests action to bridge the gaps between policy dimensions and implementation."

126 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: For example, this article found that former international students in Australia achieved comparable labor market participation rates to migrants recruited offshore, however, former students qualified in two-year courses and/or in oversubscribed fields performed worse than offshore migrants.
Abstract: In the past decade, Australia has developed unprecedented reliance on skilled migrants, a process intensified by a period of sustained economic boom. By 2007, two-thirds were former international students recruited in Australia rather than offshore applicants, exemplifying a transition to what is termed "two-step migration." How acceptable, however, are such onshore applicants to employers, in a context where Australia's 2006 skilled migration review found less favorable outcomes for former international students than migrants recruited offshore? To address this question, key education enrollment, migration and employment databases were analyzed in-depth. Overall, former international students were found to achieve comparable labor market participation rates to migrants recruited offshore. However, former students qualified in two-year courses and/or in oversubscribed fields performed worse than offshore migrants. Between 2007 and 2010, Australia introduced major policy reforms to improve the outcomes for international students applying under the skilled migration program. In February 2010, the government corrected education sector abuses while significantly changing selection processes. This decade of Australian policy experimentation may be instructive to other countries which have introduced study-migration pathways designed to attract and retain former students as skilled migrants.

124 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Hania Zlotnik1
TL;DR: A family perspective is especially important for the analysis of female migration because women are major participants in “family migration” as defined by governments and women rely on their families to provide various types of support that both make migration possible and condition its outcome.
Abstract: "This article shows that a family perspective is especially important for the analysis of female migration because: (1) women are major participants in 'family migration' as defined by governments and, although they benefit from family reunification provisions, they are also constrained by them; (2) migrant women are important economic actors and their participation in economic activity is closely related to the needs of their families, so that the choices that migrant women make regarding work cannot be understood without taking into account the situation of their families and women's roles within them; (3) women are increasingly becoming migrant workers in order to improve the economic status of their families; and (4) women rely on their families to provide various types of support that both make migration possible and condition its outcome. A review of the literature provides evidence supporting each of these observations."

107 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
202312
202232
202119
202028
201922
201825