The unsettled relationship : labor migration and economic development

Bibliographic Information

The unsettled relationship : labor migration and economic development

edited by Demetrios G. Papademetriou and Philip L. Martin ; foreword by Diego C. Asencio

(Contributions in labor studies, no. 33)

Greenwood Press, 1991

Available at  / 29 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. [285]-306

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

More than twenty million migrant workers send $40 billion to their countries of origin each year, making labor second only to oil as the most important commodity traded internationally. The essays contained here deal with this unsettled sociopolitical issue--international labor migration and its relationship to economic development--seeking to determine the effects of recruitment, remittances, and return migration on labor-exporting countries. Many analysts, sending-country governments, employers, and migrant workers feel that countries with unemployed workers should, if possible, export them to countries with labor shortages. Remittances from migrants and returning workers who were trained abroad should stimulate economic growth enough to reduce unemployment and pressures to emigrate. It was projected that within a decade or less, labor-importing countries would emerge from the labor-shortage phase of their development. However, migrant workers have become a structural feature of the economies in Western Europe, the Middle East, South Africa, and the United States: emigration does not promote development in the sending countries. This collection of twelve chapters by experts in the field examines the conceptual and theoretical issues in international labor migration and looks at the relationship between migration and development in Africa, between Mediterranean countries and Europe, between Asian labor exporters and Middle Eastern importers, and the effects of emigration on Latin America and the Caribbean. In addition to comprehensive introductory and concluding sections, Conceptual and Theoretical Issues in International Labor Migration and The Unsettled Relationship between Migration and Development, the volume is divided into four additional sections that scrutinize labor migration and development in Africa, Greece, and Turkey, Asian countries, and Latin America, Mexico, and the Caribbean. The book's recurring theme states that there is no iron law of migration-induced development: recruitment, remittances, and returns do not automatically generate stay-at-home development. This first thorough and comparative treatment, with its focus on the population, social policy, labor market, language, and foreign policy implications of recent and present policies, will be invaluable for courses on refugees and migrants in sociology and comparative public policy. Research libraries and international assistance organizations will find it an indispensable resource.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Diego C. Asencio Introduction Conceptual and Theoretical Issues in International Labor Migration Labor Migration and Development: Research and Policy Issues by Demetrios G. Papademetriou and Philip L. Martin Labor Migration: Theory and Reality by Philip L. Martin Labor Migration and Development in Africa Binational Communities and Labor Circulation in Sub-Saharan Africa by Aderanti Adepoju International Labor Migration in Southern Africa by Timothy T. Thahane Labor Migration and Development in Greece and Turkey Migration and Development in Greece: The Unfinished Story by Demetrios G. Papademetriou and Ira Emke-Poulopolos Migration without Development: The Case of Turkey by Ali S. Gitmez Labor Migration and Development in Asian Emigration Countries Migration from Pakistan to the Middle East by Shahid Javed Burki Emigration and Development in South and Southeast Asia by Charles Stahl and Ansanul Habib Labor Migration and Development in Latin America, Mexico, and the Caribbean The Effects of International Migration on Latin America by Sergio Diaz-Briquets Caribbean Emigration and Development by Patricia R. Pessar The Unsettled Relationship between Migration and Development Migration and Development: The Unsettled Relationship by Demetrios G. Papademetriou Immigration and Economic Development by the Commission for the Study of International Migration and Cooperative Economic Development Appendix: Social Indicators of Development References Index

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