Free delivery for purchases over 59.99 €
Slovak post 4.49 SPS courier 4.99 Packeta courier 4.99 Packeta point 2.99 SPS Parcel Shop 2.99

Wanted and Welcome?

Language EnglishEnglish
Book Hardback
Book Wanted and Welcome? Triadafilos Triadafilopoulos
Libristo code: 01255531
Publishers Springer-Verlag New York Inc., March 2013
This book considers the origins, performance and diffusion of national immigration policies targetin... Full description
? points 345 b
139.60
Low in stock at our supplier Shipping in 12-17 days

30-day return policy


You might also be interested in


Range Rover V8 Petrol Haynes Publishing / Paperback
common.buy 41.17
Pagan Christmas Christian Rätsch / Paperback
common.buy 34.61
Modern Hearing AIDS Ruth A Bentler / Hardback
common.buy 254.12
George Oppen and the Fate of Modernism Peter Nicholls / Paperback
common.buy 66.57
Easy Songs for Mandolin Hal Leonard Corp / Paperback
common.buy 20.99
American Silver in the Art Institute of Chicago Elizabeth McGoey / Hardback
common.buy 67.59
Essential Good Food Guide Margaret M Wittenberg / Paperback
common.buy 23.96

This book considers the origins, performance and diffusion of national immigration policies targeting highly skilled immigrants. Unlike asylum seekers and immigrants admitted under family reunification streams, highly skilled immigrants are typically cast as wanted and welcome as a consequence of their potential economic contribution to the receiving society and putative assimilability. Testing the degree to which this assumption holds is the principle aim of this book. In contrast to publications which see highly skilled immigration as functional response to labor market needs, the book probes the political and sociological dimensions of policy, drawing on contributions from an international group of established and new scholars from the fields of history, law, political science, sociology, and public policy. The book is organized into four parts. Part I probes the origins of post-WWII immigration policies in Canada, Australia, and the United States. Part II analyzes recent debates on highly skilled immigration policy in the United States, whose origins go back to the 1965 Act by Congress which favored family reunification over skilled immigration. Part III considers the degree to which highly skilled immigrants are welcome, by focusing on the integration trajectories of foreign trained professionals in Canada. Paradoxically, just as Canada has succeeded in orienting its admissions system more explicitly toward privileging highly educated and skilled professionals, highly skilled immigrants have experienced worsening economic outcomes as reflected in rates of unemployment and falling earnings. Part IV considers the internationalization of highly skilled immigration policies, focusing on Europe s most important immigration countries, Germany and Britain. As is true in Canada, the labor market outcomes for highly skilled immigrants in Europe are disappointing, and the final chapter discusses why this is the case and what might be done to improve matters, making the book of interest to both scholars and policymakers concerned with immigration policy.

Login

Log in to your account. Don't have a Libristo account? Create one now!

 
mandatory
mandatory

Don’t have an account? Discover the benefits of having a Libristo account!

With a Libristo account, you'll have everything under control.

Create a Libristo account