Results 1 to 10 of about 69 (69)

Spain: From Immigration to Emigration? [PDF]

open access: yesSSRN Electronic Journal, 2015
Since the start of the Great Recession the unemployment rate in Spain has risen by almost 18 percentage points. The unemployment crisis is affecting all population groups, including the more highly educated; but it is even more acute for the foreign population, whose unemployment rate is close to 40%.
Mario Izquierdo   +4 more
openaire   +3 more sources

The wage effects of immigration and emigration [PDF]

open access: yes, 2010
Immigrants in Rome or Paris are more visible to the public eye than the Italian or French engineers in Silicon Valley, especially when it comes to the debate on the effects of immigration on the employment and wages of natives in high-income countries.
Docquier, Frederic   +2 more
openaire   +5 more sources

The Netherlands: Old Emigrants - Young Immigrant Country [PDF]

open access: yesSSRN Electronic Journal, 1999
Since the mid 1960s the Netherlands has an immigration surplus, mainly because of manpower recruitment from Turkey and Morocco and because of immigration from the former Dutch colony of Surinam. Immigrant workers have a weak labour market position, which is mainly related to their educational level and language skills.
Ours, J.C. van, Veenman, J.M.C.
openaire   +8 more sources

Emigration and the Age Profile of Retirement Among Immigrants [PDF]

open access: yesSSRN Electronic Journal, 2008
This paper analyzes the relationship between immigrants' retirement status and the prevalence of return migration from the host country to their country of origin. We develop a simple theoretical model to illustrate that under reasonable conditions the probability of return migration is maximized at retirement.
Deborah A. Cobb-Clark   +3 more
openaire   +6 more sources

An SEIR model with infected immigrants and recovered emigrants [PDF]

open access: yesAdvances in Difference Equations, 2021
AbstractWe present a deterministic SEIR model of the said form. The population in point can be considered as consisting of a local population together with a migrant subpopulation. The migrants come into the local population for a short stay. In particular, the model allows for a constant inflow of individuals into different classes and constant ...
openaire   +5 more sources

Spain: from massive immigration to vast emigration? [PDF]

open access: yesIZA Journal of Migration, 2016
AbstractLarge immigration flows during the 1995–2007 period increased the weight of foreigners living in Spain to 12 % of the total population. The rapid increase in unemployment associated with the Great Recession and the subsequent European debt crisis, substantially changed migration flows, so that, from the beginning of the 2010s, Spain experienced
Izquierdo, Mario   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

A branching process with immigration and emigration

open access: yesStatistica, 1992
Seneta (1968) gave a sufficient condition for a limiting stationary distribution by allowing immigration in a critical branching process. However, if the emigration is also going on simultaneously, then instability in the population structure is bound to occur.
S. C. Gupta, Om Prakash Srivastava
openaire   +2 more sources

Migration/immigration/emigration

open access: yesK&K - Kultur og Klasse, 2016
Anmeldelse af Sten Pultz Moslund, Anne Ringe Petersen & Moritz Schramm (red.): The Culture of Migra­tion. Politics, Aesthetics and Histories. I. B Taurus, London.
openaire   +3 more sources

Immigration as a Recuperative Process in The Emigrants

open access: yesUluslararası İnsan Çalışmaları Dergisi, 2019
George Lamming is a postcolonial author who has his roots in the Caribbean islands in which he could witness harmful impacts of colonialism on the native population. Instead of losing his hope to resist the colonial legacy, he attempts to develop his anti-colonialist discourse through producing literary texts in which he aims to raise  awareness of the
openaire   +3 more sources

Some Aspects of the Emigration-Immigration Process [PDF]

open access: yesThe Annals of Mathematical Statistics, 1962
A multivariate emigration-immigration or a Poisson-Markoff process (Bartlett [2], Ruben and Rothschild [9], Patil [8]; cf. also Bartlett [3], p. 78) is a vector stochastic process $\mathbf{n}(t) = (n_1(t), n_2(t), \cdots, n_m(t))$ in continuous time $t$ which is described by the following properties: There exists a complex of non-negative time ...
openaire   +2 more sources

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