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Related Concept Videos

Migration00:53

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The meaning of illness is individualized to each person who experiences an alteration in health. In contrast, disease is a medical term indicating a pathological change in the structure and function of the body or mind. It is a condition that has specific symptoms and boundaries.
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Human T Lymphocyte Isolation, Culture and Analysis of Migration In Vitro
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Editorial Introduction: The Shifting Geopolitics of Return Migration and Reintegration.

Zana Vathi1, Russell King2, Barak Kalir3

  • 1Ormskirk, UK Edge Hill University.

Journal of International Migration and Integration
|July 5, 2022
PubMed
Summary

Return migration and reintegration are deeply influenced by geopolitical contexts, differing significantly from immigration. Migrants navigate complex socio-political factors for successful return and re-migration.

Keywords:
GeopoliticsMigration governanceOntological (in)securityReintegrationReturn migration

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Area of Science:

  • Sociology
  • Political Science
  • Migration Studies

Background:

  • Geopolitics increasingly influences return migration policies and practices.
  • Reintegration is shaped by historical, socio-cultural, and political contexts of sending countries.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To analyze the geopolitics of return migration and reintegration.
  • To highlight how sending states' geopolitical marginality impacts reintegration.
  • To explore migrants' strategies in the context of migration governance.

Main Methods:

  • Qualitative analysis of geopolitical influences on return migration.
  • Examination of stakeholder strategies in reintegration.
  • Comparative insights from global research on return and reintegration.

Main Results:

  • Return and reintegration are distinct processes from immigration and integration.
  • Sending states' geopolitical power marginality shapes reintegration outcomes.
  • Migrants' strategies are intertwined with multi-scale geopolitical dynamics.
  • Contrast between securitization in high-income countries and precarity for migrants.

Conclusions:

  • Reintegration is a complex process contingent on diverse legal, political, and socio-economic factors.
  • Understanding return migration requires a geopolitical lens, acknowledging power dynamics.
  • Migrants' agency and ontological security are central to navigating reintegration.