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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

A theory of migration: the aspirations-capabilities framework.

Hein de Haas
- 24 Feb 2021 - 
- Vol. 9, Iss: 1, pp 1-35
TLDR
In this article, an aspirations-capabilities framework for human mobility is proposed to understand the complex and often counter-intuitive ways in which processes of social transformation and development shape patterns of migration and enable us to integrate the analysis of almost all forms of migratory mobility within one meta-conceptual framework.
Abstract
This paper elaborates an aspirations–capabilities framework to advance our understanding of human mobility as an intrinsic part of broader processes of social change. In order to achieve a more meaningful understanding of agency and structure in migration processes, this framework conceptualises migration as a function of aspirations and capabilities to migrate within given sets of perceived geographical opportunity structures. It distinguishes between the instrumental (means-to-an-end) and intrinsic (directly wellbeing-affecting) dimensions of human mobility. This yields a vision in which moving and staying are seen as complementary manifestations of migratory agency and in which human mobility is defined as people’s capability to choose where to live, including the option to stay, rather than as the act of moving or migrating itself. Drawing on Berlin’s concepts of positive and negative liberty (as manifestations of the widely varying structural conditions under which migration occurs) this paper conceptualises how macro-structural change shapes people’s migratory aspirations and capabilities. The resulting framework helps to understand the complex and often counter-intuitive ways in which processes of social transformation and ‘development’ shape patterns of migration and enable us to integrate the analysis of almost all forms of migratory mobility within one meta-conceptual framework.

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TL;DR: In this article , the authors highlight the multiplicity of mobility in the context of a changing climate, including the interrelations between human mobilities and immobilities and their interplay with other mobile flows, such as the mobilities of ideas, information, or climate risk.
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Migration Theory in Climate Mobility Research

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Climate change increases resource-constrained international immobility

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors provide a quantitative, global analysis of reduced international mobility due to resource deprivation caused by climate change and incorporate both migration dynamics and within-region income distributions in an integrated assessment model.
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Aspiring for Change: Ethiopian Women’s Labor Migration to the Middle East

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine why young women in rural Ethiopia decide to migrate as domestic workers to the Middle East, based on survey data and 84 in-depth interviews, and explore the forces shaping young women's aspirations and capabilities to migrate, challenging the dominant narratives of trafficking, deception, and victimization that surround this migration corridor.
Journal ArticleDOI

Disciplining migration aspirations through migration-information campaigns: A systematic review of the literature.

Abstract: In the past few years, governmental agencies have developed a diverse repertoire of migration-management measures to steer migration flows and discipline unwanted migration. Migration-information campaigns have become a prominent tool aimed at communicating directly to migration aspirations of the targeted population in transit and sending countries. Through these information campaigns the geographical locus of control is shifted toward where the receiving state seeks to steer migration flows. This review paper is a research synthesis on literature engaging with migration-information campaigns. The study is based on 17 peer-reviewed journal articles from the years 2010-2020. Articles were coded based on discipline, type of research, research perspective, geographic origin and focus of the campaigns, objectives and rationale of the campaigns, tools and methods used in those campaigns, campaign funding, actor constellations, and a general assessment of each article. Findings from this study identify prominent trends as well as blind spots in the current research and indicate that there is still little research available on information campaigns concerning irregular migration, and even fewer studies report on their effectiveness. By implication future research is advised to focus on empirical studies on the impact of information campaigns on migrants' aspirations.
References
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Saskia Sassen
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The Global City: New York, London, Tokyo

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