Academic literature on the topic 'Return migrants – Vietnam'

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Journal articles on the topic "Return migrants – Vietnam"

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Thanh, Ngo Trung, Philippe Lebailly, and Nguyen Thi Dien. "Internal Return Migration in Rural of Vietnam: Reasons and Consequences." Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences 10, no. 1 (2019): 27–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/mjss-2019-0003.

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Abstract Many researchers have tried to explain the motivation behind out and return migration. However, few bodies of literature focus on selection of destinations of out migration, motives to return according to marriage status of migrants before the return and gender perspective of employments on the return. By surveying 68 returnees and applying participatory rural appraisal, this study shows that the personal and household characteristics of returnees before the migration create an effect on destination selections On the return, both single and married migrants are motivated by filial obl
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Vu, Thi Thanh. "Vietnamese Migrant Women Working Abroad: Risks and Challenges for Accessing Support Services." DEMIS. Demographic research 1, no. 1 (2021): 71–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.19181/demis.2021.1.1.8.

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Today Vietnam is a country with second largest number of migrant workers in Southeast Asia. Every year a great number of Vietnamese women migrate abroad by various ways for earning a living. They might experience many risks such as labor exploitation, violence and human trafficking. Basing on qualitative data collected from in-depth interviews and focus-group discussions with return women migrant workers and with provincial authority agencies in 5 provinces in Vietnam, the article reflects the risks faced by women migrant workers and their limitation of accessing help services during the time
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Phuong, Nguyen Quynh, and Mokbul Morshed Ahmad. "An exploratory study of the migration pathways by international labour migrants from Vietnam." International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy 39, no. 3/4 (2019): 311–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijssp-12-2018-0234.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to map the “migration pathways” (King and Skeldon, 2010) followed by interviews with a group of Vietnamese international labour migrants. Design/methodology/approach Through 50 in-depth interviews, the authors identify the reasons that explain the pathways observed. Findings The authors found that more than half of the interviewees did what King and Skeldon describe as a U-turn, whereby the migrants go abroad for work directly from their home town and return to settle there. The remainder did a J-turn, meaning the migrants returned and settled elsewhere. Th
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Trần, Angie Ngọc, and Vicki Crinis. "Migrant Labor and State Power." Journal of Vietnamese Studies 13, no. 2 (2018): 27–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/vs.2018.13.2.27.

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Drawing on Foucault’s concepts of biopolitical subject formation and governmentality, this article seeks to understand transnational state power and how Vietnamese migrant workers negotiate within a transnational framework both while working in Malaysia and upon their return to Vietnam. By conducting multi-sited interviews in Vietnam and Malaysia between 2008 and 2015, we contribute to the transnational labor migration literature by focusing on Vietnamese factory and construction workers in Malaysia and their resistance to transnational state power. We argue that these two emerging economies,
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Nguyen-Akbar, Mytoan. "The Formation of Spatial and Symbolic Boundaries among Vietnamese Diasporic Skilled Return Migrants in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam." Sociological Perspectives 60, no. 6 (2017): 1115–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0731121417700113.

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More than 40 years since the end of the Vietnam War, a younger generation of Vietnamese Americans is returning to their parents’ ancestral homeland with career opportunities tied to Vietnam’s economic growth in the past decade. These more permanent return migrations reveal strategies of local and global assertions of belonging and identity management among the “1.5” and second generation of Vietnamese Americans who work in high-skilled professions in their parents’ ancestral homeland. Known there as the Viet Kieu (Overseas Vietnamese), those who work in both corporate and nongovernmental organ
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Le, Thi Huyen, Yoshinori Nakagawa, and Yutaka Kobayashi. "Conditions under Which Rural-to-Urban Migration Enhances Social and Economic Sustainability of Home Communities: A Case Study in Vietnam." Sustainability 13, no. 15 (2021): 8326. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su13158326.

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Rural-to-urban migration contributes to the economic and social sustainability of sending communities. The aim of this study was to obtain quantitative evidence supporting the theoretical argument that (i) rural-to-urban migrants contribute to the sustainability of their sending communities, and (ii) once they return, they are likely to behave prosocially as return migrants because they feel a responsibility to apply the knowledge and skills they acquired during migration for the sake of others in their sending communities. A cross-sectional survey was conducted in Hanoi, Vietnam, a typical de
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Hoang Anh, Tuan, and Cong Phan The. "Socio-Economic Consequences of Vietnamese Return Migration from Japan." DEMIS. Demographic Research 2, no. 1 (2022): 94–0. http://dx.doi.org/10.19181/demis.2022.2.1.8.

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This paper starts with building a theoretical framework related to the determinants of migration and the phenomenon of return migration. The dynamic process of development and global economic integration are considered the main driver of migration. Return migration is understood as eminent expertise abroad wherever the migrant accomplished the goals of gaining higher financial gain, upper level of education, new skills, foreign work experience, acquaintance with new values and attitudes. Then the article proceeds to reviewing migration links between Japan and Vietnam. Japan is the country that
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Nguyen, Nga Hong, and Trang Thi Thu Nguyen. "Assuring Social Equity and Improving Income from an Assessment of Government’s Supports in a Pandemic and Migrant Workers’ Integration in Vietnam." Economies 10, no. 4 (2022): 94. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/economies10040094.

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Income improvement is the primary expectation when deciding to migrate. However, due to the limited resources and urban facilities, informal sector work leads to an increasing income gap with local workers, migrant workers in big cities are considered the most vulnerable population. When there is no social policy, migrants are even more susceptible to the negative impacts of COVID-19. To identify necessary bases for short-term and long-term intervention to attract workers to return and quickly adapt to the urban life in the economic recovery process, the study surveyed to clarify the assessmen
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Jullien, Clara. "<i>Nhà Trọ</i>, Rental Rooms for Fragments of Life. Temporary Footprint of Rural Migrants in Ho Chi Minh City". Russian Journal of Vietnamese Studies 5, № 1S (2021): 52–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.54631/vs.2021.s-52-65.

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In Ho Chi Minh City, private complexes of rental rooms designated in Vietnamese asnhtrọform one of the cheapest housing stocks, targeting the working-class, including internal rural migrants. This article combines the insights of both migration and urban studies to analyze the occupation of thenhtrọthrough the concept of temporariness. It addresses the tensions between present constraints and long-term plans of rural migrants as well as their translation into the occupation of the urban space. The method draws upon observations of rental housing and interviews conducted in two suburban neighbo
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Nguyen-Akbar, Mytoan. "Finding the American Dream Abroad? Narratives of Return Among 1.5 and Second Generation Vietnamese American Skilled Migrants in Vietnam." Journal of Vietnamese Studies 11, no. 2 (2016): 96–121. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jvs.2016.11.2.96.

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This essay, using multi-sited ethnographic methods, discusses the motivations for the en masse longer-term migration of 1.5 and second generation Vietnamese American professionals to their parents’ ancestral homeland during the 2000s. Social class dynamics, gender, racial, and national identity in the United States and migrant selectivity inform their decisions to migrate to the ancestral homeland for personal growth and to help develop the country. The interviewees’ framing of return experiences reflects the social ambivalence of returning as “in between” subjects in pursuit of a liberal capi
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Return migrants – Vietnam"

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Nguyen, Quy Khanh. "Vietnamese return skilled migrants and their reintegration in Vietnam /." [St. Lucia, Qld], 2004. http://www.library.uq.edu.au/pdfserve.php?image=thesisabs/absthe18234.pdf.

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Xu, Hui. "Essays on the interaction between migration and sending communities : evidence from China and Vietnam." Phd thesis, Ecole normale supérieure de lyon - ENS LYON, 2011. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00808693.

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This dissertation is comprised of three chapters on the interaction between migrants and their source regions applied to China and Vietnam. The first chapter examines whether remittances are related to receivers' trust and trustworthiness in Vietnam. Using a combination of a field experiment conducted in 2010 and the "2002 Vietnam Household Living Standards Survey", the chapter finds that while internal remittances have no significant relationship to trusting behavior, international remittances demonstrate a significantly positive connection. On the other hand, international remittances are ne
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