International Migration: Volume 63 (2) April 2025

Original Language
English
Year of Publication
2025
Region
Worldwide
Country
Worldwide
International Migration: Volume 63 (2) April 2025
International Migration is a refereed bimonthly review of the International Organization for Migration (IOM) on current migration issues as analysed by demographers, economists, and sociologists all over the world. The journal is edited by Koç University and published and distributed by Wiley. The editor at Koç University is responsible for the direction and content of the journal.
Electronic version available from Wiley-Science. Click here.
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- ISSUE INFORMATION
- Issue Information
- ORIGINAL ARTICLE
- Migration diplomacy and Greek–Turkish relations: A three-level game analysis
- SPECIAL ISSUE ARTICLE
- The emotional politics of return migration: Negotiating im/mobilities across borders and generations
- COMMENTARY
- Beyond the WDR's state-centrism: Multi-level migration governance and migrant exclusion
- SPECIAL ISSUE ARTICLE
- Parties abroad and migrants' representation in the country of origin
- ORIGINAL ARTICLE
- Reactive ethnicity and the ascent of the Trump administration
- SPECIAL ISSUE ARTICLE
- Computing the face: From coloniality to control
- ORIGINAL ARTICLE
- Time spent abroad as a source of human capital – A nationwide study
- SPECIAL ISSUE ARTICLE
- How return migration becomes a viable option in older age
- ORIGINAL ARTICLE
- Resilience in action: Poland's response to the migration crisis caused by the war in Ukraine
- Formation of an academic diaspora: A study of scholars from Turkey in the higher education sector in Britain
- SPECIAL ISSUE ARTICLE
- Negative social capital and requests for resources in a developing country: The case of rural–urban migrants in Kampala, Uganda
- Social networks as double-edged swords: Understanding the impact of relational positivity and negativity on Hungarian migrants' return experiences
- The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on network dynamics among Chinese immigrants in the United States
- The puzzle of loneliness: A sociostructural and transnational analysis of International Chinese Students' networks in Germany
- “You are too expensive, you need to work faster!”: Ukrainian agricultural workers navigating precarities in Denmark
- ORIGINAL ARTICLE
- Circular and return migration of Egyptian migrant workers in Libya
- SPECIAL ISSUE ARTICLE
- ‘You would never pick up the thread from where you left off’: Older Irish women migrants' narratives of non-return, post-retirement
- Multiplicities and fluidity in the networked relationships of migrant academics in Britain
- Beyond mixed embeddedness: Multilevel personal networks of migrant entrepreneurs in Naples and Manchester
- Qualitative analysis of migrants' network data: Using conceptual reflexivity to reveal the ‘magic trick’
- Size and ethnic homogeneity of extended social networks in the Netherlands: Differences between migrant groups and migrant generations
- Democrats abroad: What motivates core activists to engage in political transnationalism?
- Persistent ties, evolving networks: Accounting for changes and stability in migrant support networks
- Homeland–diaspora nexus during crisis: Towards a transformed engagement model
- Agricultural crisis, refugee crisis, or health crisis? Migrant seasonal workers in Italian agriculture during the COVID pandemic
- Evaluating special representation of non-resident citizens: Eligibility, constituency and proportionality
- ORIGINAL ARTICLE
- Revealing the power of informal social support: Impact on rural migrants' entrepreneurial income
- SPECIAL ISSUE ARTICLE
- Neoliberalism in question: The Philippines' nurse education and labour export as liberal neo-statist development agenda
- COMMENTARY
- Do we need more or less focus on “class” in migration research?
- What migrant narratives can tell us about the role of class in migration (and about class in general)
- Rethinking migration through the lens of social class
- SPECIAL ISSUE ARTICLE
- Pondering the non-return of ageing migrants in the Finnish–Russian everyday transnational context
- Diaspora alumni networks as transnational governance actors
- Ageing of returnees to Morocco: Residential strategies under constraint?