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The effects of integration and transnational ties on international return migration intentions

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Hein de Haas
Tineke Fokkema

 
VOLUME 25 - ARTICLE 24
PAGES 755 - 782
Date Received: 20 May 2011
Date Published: 6 Dec 2011

http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol25/24/

doi:10.4054/DemRes.2011.25.24
   
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Abstract

While return migration is receiving increasing attention, there is still insufficient insight into the factors which determine migrants’ intentions and decisions to return. It is often assumed that integration in receiving countries and the concomitant weakening of transnational ties decreases the likelihood of returning. However, according to alternative theoretical interpretations, return migration can also be the outflow of successful integration in receiving countries. Drawing on a data set of four African immigrant groups in Spain and Italy, this articlereviews these conflicting hypotheses by assessing the effects of integration and transnational ties on return migration intentions. The results of the analysis suggest that socio-cultural integration has a negative effect on return migration intentions, while economic integration and transnational ties have more ambiguous and sometimes positive effects. The results provide mixed support for the different hypotheses but question theoretical perspectives that unequivocally conceptualizereturn migration and transnationalism as causes and/or consequences of "integration failure".

Author's affiliation
Hein de Haas
Oxford University, United Kingdom
Tineke Fokkema
Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute, Netherlands

Keywords
Africa, Europe, integration, international migration, return migration, transnationalism

Word count (Main text)
7369

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