Title: Theories%20of%20International%20Migration
1Theories of International Migration
- What are social theories?
- Social theories conceptualize causal processes of
social phenomenon. - Theories of International Migration conceptualize
causal processes of how international migration
is initiated and maintained or perpetuated.
2The Purpose of a Thorough Review on Theories of
International Migration
- To take a theoretical position that is open to
- Analysis on every level, individual, household,
networks, and international - Different disciplinary assumptions and hypothesis
- Different perspectives within the same discipline.
3International Migration
- Reason Current patterns and trends in
immigration suggest that a full understanding of
contemporary migratory processes will not be
achieved by relying on the tools of one
discipline alone, or by focusing on a single
level of analysis. (Massey et al, p.258)
4The Initiation of International Migration
- Why does international migration begin?
Theoretical Approach Level of Analysis Assumptions
Neoclassical (macro) Country Migration as a result of labor market gaps between countries
Neoclassical economics (micro) Individual Individual rational actors decide to migrate because a cost-benefit calculation.
New Economics Household Individual migrants are influenced by household as a collective actor in economic survival
Dual Labor Market Structural (Internal) Structural demands of developed countries
World systems theory Structural (International) Market and cultural penetration from the core to peripherals
5Neoclassical Economics Combining Macro and Micro
- Propositions
- International migration stems from international
differentials in wages and opportunities.(macro-le
vel) - To maximize their human capital return,
individuals who can have higher return to human
capital in receiving countries are more likely to
move internationally than others. - When the cost of migration is lower, the
possibility for potential migrants to move is
higher. - 23 explains the differential migration decisions
between individuals within the same sending
country.
6The New Economics of Migration
- Proposition
- Migration decisions are not made by
isolated individual actors, but by larger units
of related people typically families or
households not only to maximize their income but
also to minimize risks and constraints.
7Dual Labor Market Theory (I) Point of Departure
- Point of departure from neoclassical and new
economics neoclassical and new economics analyze
micro-level decisions, dual labor market theory
argues that international migration stems from
intrinsic labor demands of modern industrial
societies. - Main difference Neoclassical and new economics
focus on the supply of migrants and the dual
labor market theory stresses the demand of
receiving countries.
8Dual Labor Market Theory (II)
- Propositions
- People at developed societies faced motivational
problems to enter the bottom of job hierarchy
because there is no status in society and few
channels for upward mobility. Such job vacancy
creates demand for foreign workers who do not
have the motivational problems because they do
not expect bottom level jobs anything beyond
means to earn money. - Migration is usually initiated or pulled by
recruitment on the part of employers in developed
countries, or by governments acting as agents of
employers.
9World Systems Theory (I)
- Proposition
- The penetration of capitalist economic relations
into peripheral, non-capitalist societies creates
a mobile population that is ready to migrate
abroad. - Migration is a natural outgrowth of disruptions
and dislocations that occur in the process of
capitalist development in developing countries.
World system theory argues that international
migration follows the expanding global markets.
10World Systems Theory (II)
- Capitalist investment fosters changes that create
an uprooted, mobile population in peripheral
countries while at the same time forging strong
material and cultural links with core countries,
leading to international migration. - International migration is especially likely
between past colonial powers and the former
colonies, because cultural, linguistic,
investment, transportation, and communication
links were established early. - International migration has little to do with
wage differences between countries it is a
result of the dynamics of the global economy.
11The Perpetuation of International Movement
- Main focus
- Once international migration begun,
other new conditions come in to perpetuate
migration across time and space. Although wage
differentials, household strategies, demands in
receiving countries, and global market
penetration may continue to cause people to
migrate, new conditions arise to function as
independent causes. Different theories stress
different conditions that make the migration
decisions or situations independent of structural
or individual factors that originally caused
migration.
12Theories of perpetuation
Theoretical Approaches Focus of analysis
Network theory Informal social connections connect current migrants, former migrants and potential migrants in sending and receiving countries
Institutional theory Organizations that support, sustain, and promote international movement
Cumulative causation Conditions that make subsequent migration inevitable, more likely, or easier.