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(Post)transformational Migration

Inequalities, Welfare State, and Horizontal Mobility

by Marek Nowak (Volume editor) Michal Nowosielski (Volume editor)
©2011 Edited Collection 302 Pages
Series: Dia-Logos, Volume 13

Summary

Perceived inequalities, such as the lack of a proper job or bad living conditions, can play the role of push factors that make people migrate. Apart from this, there are studies which focus more on relative deprivation, exacerbated by inequality, as a basic determinant of people’s mobility, and also some are focused on the influence of income inequality on migration. Such «structural conditions» are only a part of the story of migration, particularly because differences and inequalities are social facts, elements of the universal shape of modern open societies. Ultimately inequality, as more general departure point, can’t be merely an element of explanation, and it is important to remember that not only do «objective» social differences and the inequalities caused by them foster migration behaviour, but so do their social perceptions.

Details

Pages
302
Publication Year
2011
ISBN (PDF)
9783653006513
ISBN (Hardcover)
9783631617564
DOI
10.3726/978-3-653-00651-3
Language
English
Publication date
2011 (August)
Keywords
Push factors Central and Eastern Europe Great Britain Welfare State
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2011. 302 pp., 3 fig., num. tables and graphs
Product Safety
Peter Lang Group AG

Biographical notes

Marek Nowak (Volume editor) Michal Nowosielski (Volume editor)

Marek Nowak, PhD in sociology; lecturer at the Institute of Sociology at Adam Mickiewicz University Poznań (Poland); specialised in Economic Sociology and sociology of social activism. Michał Nowosielski, PhD in sociology, Deputy Director of the Institute for Western Affairs, Poznań (Poland); research interests: Poles in Germany, ethnic and immigrant organizations, diaspora policies.

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Title: (Post)transformational Migration