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Journal ArticleDOI

Changed in Migration? Philippine Return Migrants and (Un)Democratic Remittances

Stefan Rother
- 01 Jan 2009 - 
- Vol. 8, Iss: 2, pp 245-274
TLDR
The potential of the migration experience to affect migrants' attitudes towards democracy, thus playing an important role in the diffuse support needed for democracies in the stage of consolidation, has been attested in this article.
Abstract
The link between development and migration has been termed the 'new development mantra'. Studies on the subject have so far mostly focused on economic remittances, and the potential consequences of return migration on democratisation have been rarely touched upon. This article attests the potential of the migration experience to affect migrants' attitudes towards democracy, thus playing an important role in the diffuse support needed for democracies in the stage of consolidation. Based on a survey among 1,000 Philippine return migrants from six destinations, the paper suggests that the migration experience may not only lead to a more critical stance towards the political system of the home country; there are also indicators of lesser support for the principles of democracy when compared to migrants about to leave the country for the first time. The political system of the destination as such seems to be a less decisive factor than the specific freedoms and restrictions experienced by migrants and a potential bias when selecting the destination. The article focuses on return migrants from Saudi Arabia, Hong Kong and Japan, which showed the most distinctive numbers in support of democracy or changes therein when compared to first-time migrants heading for that destination.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Unpacking the Diaspora Channel in New Democracies: When Do Migrants Act Politically Back Home?

TL;DR: The authors identify the structural conditions under which migrants from post-1980 democracies are likely to activate the "diaspora channel" of political influence back home and identify, explain, and code two sets of incentives likely to induce migrants to engage in home-country politics from abroad: (1) socioeconomic incentives generated by cross-border linkages and migrant characteristics likely to predispose them toward broader forms of transnational engagement and (2) political incentive generated by diaspora politicization and formal access to the political process in the home country.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clientelism Versus Social Learning: The Electoral Effects of International Migration

TL;DR: In this article, a voting model that accounts for the effect of higher income through remittances and shows that its expected effects on voter turnout patterns differ in important ways from those of improved civic values.
Journal ArticleDOI

Two centuries of flows between ‘here’ and ‘there’: political remittances and their transformative potential

TL;DR: In this paper, a concept of political remittances is proposed, which offers a distinct analytical perspective and enables a comparative assessment across time and space by providing a new conceptualisation.
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