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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Migration and Development: A Theoretical Perspective

Hein de Haas
- 05 Mar 2010 - 
- Vol. 44, Iss: 1, pp 227-264
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Abstract
The debate on migration and development has swung back and forth like a pendulum, from developmentalist optimism in the 1950s and 1960s, to neo-Marxist pessimism over the 1970s and 1980s, towards more optimistic views in the 1990s and 2000s. This paper argues how such discursive shifts in the migration and development debate should be primarily seen as part of more general paradigm shifts in social and development theory. However, the classical opposition between pessimistic and optimistic views is challenged by empirical evidence pointing to the heterogeneity of migration impacts. By integrating and amending insights from the new economics of labor migration, livelihood perspectives in development studies and transnational perspectives in migration studies – which share several though as yet unobserved conceptual parallels – this paper elaborates the contours of a conceptual framework that simultaneously integrates agency and structure perspectives and is therefore able to account for the heterogeneous nature of migration-development interactions. The resulting perspective reveals the naivety of recent views celebrating migration as self-help development “from below”. These views are largely ideologically driven and shift the attention away from structural constraints and the vital role of states in shaping favorable conditions for positive development impacts of migration to occur.

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Citations
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The Internal Dynamics of Migration Processes: A Theoretical Inquiry

TL;DR: This paper proposed a conceptual framework on the internal dynamics of migration processes by elaborating a set of hypotheses on the various migration-facilitating and migration-undermining feedback mechanisms at play in the various trajectories and stages of migration system formation and decline.
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The Migration and Development Pendulum: A Critical View on Research and Policy

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Migrant Balancing Acts: Understanding the Interactions Between Integration and Transnationalism

TL;DR: The authors explored ways of understanding the interactions between migrant integration and transnationalism, based on a review of quantitative and qualitative literature and developed a typology for understanding these interactions, with an acknowledgment of migrants' agency in straddling two societies.
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Migration as a contribution to resilience and innovation in climate adaptation: Social networks and co-development in Northwest Africa

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored possible opportunities, innovative approaches and institutional mechanisms for migration as a contribution to climate adaptation in the Western Sahel region, with a focus on Mali, Mauritania and Senegal.
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Environmental Dimensions of Migration

TL;DR: It is argued that sociologists could contribute significantly to migration-environment inquiry through attention to issues of inequality, perceptions, and agency vis-à-vis structure as well as promising developments in the field.
References
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors develop an analytical framework for analyzing rural livelihoods in terms of their sustainability and their implications for rural poverty, arguing that the analysis of rural livelihood needs to understand people's access to five types of capital asset and the ways in which they combine and transform those assets in the building of livelihoods that as far as possible meet their material and their experiential needs.
Posted Content

The new economics of labor migration

TL;DR: This paper reviewed selected theoretical and empirical developments in the field of labor migration economics and found that the migration behavior of individuals differs in accordance with their perceived relative deprivation; those who were relatively more deprived tend to have stronger incentive to migrate than those who are relatively less deprived, while a reference group characterized by more income inequality is likely to generate more relative deprivation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Motivations to Remit: Evidence from Botswana

TL;DR: In this paper, a theory of motivations to send remittances is described and tested with data from Botswana, where altruism is one of the motivations tested and found to be an insufficient explanation for remittance among migrants in Botswana.
Book

The Migration of Labor

Oded Stark
TL;DR: A relative deprivation approach to migration is proposed in this paper, where the economic performance of migrants and their remittances is analyzed in the context of planning with migration in a context of economic instability.