Transnationalism and development mexican and Chinese Immigrant Organizations in the United States

The literature on development in economics and sociology has tended to focus on capital flows, investments, and, more recently, institutions as key causal factors. International migration, when discussed, is relegated to the status of a symptom of underdevelopment and even a factor contributing to it. The more recent literature on migrant remittances has partially reversed this view by documenting large hard currency transfers made by expatriates to their home countries. This changed approach to migration and development does not go far enough because it does not take into account the organized efforts of immigrant communities themselves. Nor does it consider important developmental synergies produced by the rising interactions between immigrant organizations and sending-country governments. Using data from a recently completed comparative study, we document these processes for two major countries of out-migration-Mexico and China. The study compiled inventories of migrant organizations from both countries in the United States, interviewed leaders of the major ones, and complemented these data with interviews with officials and community leaders in each sending country. Profiles of these transnational ties were constructed, exemplifying their increasing density and developmental impact at the local and national levels. Theoretical and policy implications of the findings are discussed.

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Main Authors: Portes, Alejandro autor/a, Zhou, Min autor/a
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Inmigrantes, Organización internacional,
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id KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:52254
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:522542023-05-26T11:35:10ZTransnationalism and development mexican and Chinese Immigrant Organizations in the United States Portes, Alejandro autor/a Zhou, Min autor/a textengThe literature on development in economics and sociology has tended to focus on capital flows, investments, and, more recently, institutions as key causal factors. International migration, when discussed, is relegated to the status of a symptom of underdevelopment and even a factor contributing to it. The more recent literature on migrant remittances has partially reversed this view by documenting large hard currency transfers made by expatriates to their home countries. This changed approach to migration and development does not go far enough because it does not take into account the organized efforts of immigrant communities themselves. Nor does it consider important developmental synergies produced by the rising interactions between immigrant organizations and sending-country governments. Using data from a recently completed comparative study, we document these processes for two major countries of out-migration-Mexico and China. The study compiled inventories of migrant organizations from both countries in the United States, interviewed leaders of the major ones, and complemented these data with interviews with officials and community leaders in each sending country. Profiles of these transnational ties were constructed, exemplifying their increasing density and developmental impact at the local and national levels. Theoretical and policy implications of the findings are discussed.The literature on development in economics and sociology has tended to focus on capital flows, investments, and, more recently, institutions as key causal factors. International migration, when discussed, is relegated to the status of a symptom of underdevelopment and even a factor contributing to it. The more recent literature on migrant remittances has partially reversed this view by documenting large hard currency transfers made by expatriates to their home countries. This changed approach to migration and development does not go far enough because it does not take into account the organized efforts of immigrant communities themselves. Nor does it consider important developmental synergies produced by the rising interactions between immigrant organizations and sending-country governments. Using data from a recently completed comparative study, we document these processes for two major countries of out-migration-Mexico and China. The study compiled inventories of migrant organizations from both countries in the United States, interviewed leaders of the major ones, and complemented these data with interviews with officials and community leaders in each sending country. Profiles of these transnational ties were constructed, exemplifying their increasing density and developmental impact at the local and national levels. Theoretical and policy implications of the findings are discussed.InmigrantesOrganización internacionalPopulation and Development Review
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Inmigrantes
Organización internacional
Inmigrantes
Organización internacional
spellingShingle Inmigrantes
Organización internacional
Inmigrantes
Organización internacional
Portes, Alejandro autor/a
Zhou, Min autor/a
Transnationalism and development mexican and Chinese Immigrant Organizations in the United States
description The literature on development in economics and sociology has tended to focus on capital flows, investments, and, more recently, institutions as key causal factors. International migration, when discussed, is relegated to the status of a symptom of underdevelopment and even a factor contributing to it. The more recent literature on migrant remittances has partially reversed this view by documenting large hard currency transfers made by expatriates to their home countries. This changed approach to migration and development does not go far enough because it does not take into account the organized efforts of immigrant communities themselves. Nor does it consider important developmental synergies produced by the rising interactions between immigrant organizations and sending-country governments. Using data from a recently completed comparative study, we document these processes for two major countries of out-migration-Mexico and China. The study compiled inventories of migrant organizations from both countries in the United States, interviewed leaders of the major ones, and complemented these data with interviews with officials and community leaders in each sending country. Profiles of these transnational ties were constructed, exemplifying their increasing density and developmental impact at the local and national levels. Theoretical and policy implications of the findings are discussed.
format Texto
topic_facet Inmigrantes
Organización internacional
author Portes, Alejandro autor/a
Zhou, Min autor/a
author_facet Portes, Alejandro autor/a
Zhou, Min autor/a
author_sort Portes, Alejandro autor/a
title Transnationalism and development mexican and Chinese Immigrant Organizations in the United States
title_short Transnationalism and development mexican and Chinese Immigrant Organizations in the United States
title_full Transnationalism and development mexican and Chinese Immigrant Organizations in the United States
title_fullStr Transnationalism and development mexican and Chinese Immigrant Organizations in the United States
title_full_unstemmed Transnationalism and development mexican and Chinese Immigrant Organizations in the United States
title_sort transnationalism and development mexican and chinese immigrant organizations in the united states
work_keys_str_mv AT portesalejandroautora transnationalismanddevelopmentmexicanandchineseimmigrantorganizationsintheunitedstates
AT zhouminautora transnationalismanddevelopmentmexicanandchineseimmigrantorganizationsintheunitedstates
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