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Emigration, return and development in Cape Verde: The impact of crossing borders. Population

저자
Carling, J.
서지
Space and Place 102(2)
발간일
2004
조회수
157
SNS 공유
네이버 블로그 공유하기 페이스북 공유하기 트위터 공유하기 구글 플러스 공유하기 카카오 스토리 공유하기
Few countries in the world are more dependent on migration than Cape Verde. A small, barren and isolated place, Cape Verde has survived – and prospered – due to the migration lifeline. However, immigration policies in destination countries have made emigration gradually more difficult since the early 1970s until today. In Cape Verde, emigration is such a key structural feature of the society and economy that falling emigration is a major concern. This article addresses the ways in which the restrictive migration regime is affecting three aspects of the migration–development nexus in Cape Verde: recruitment of migrants, return migration, and remittances. The last of these is analysed within the context of transnational practices more generally. The ‘unmaking’ of the Cape Verdean diaspora is still no more than a future scenario, but the processes that challenge the continuation of diasporic loyalties have already gained momentum.
이전글
Adjustment of status, remittances, and return: Some observations on 21st century migration processes
다음글
Theorising return migration: The conceptual approach to return migrants revisited