MIG WP 16 (rev) INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION FOR
Transcription
MIG WP 16 (rev) INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION FOR
MIG WP 16 (rev) INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION FOR EMPLOYMENT Working Paper BIBLIOGRAPHY ON INTERNATIONAL RETURN MIGRATION (2nd revised edition) Note: This paper is issued by the International Migration for Employment Branch. It is circulated informally in a limited number of copies to stimulate research and action. September 1986 Printed in Switzerland Copyright © International Labour Organisation 1986 Copyright © Organisation internationale du Travail 1986 Copyright © Organizacidn Internacional del Trabajo 1986 Publications of the International Labour Office enjoy copyright under Protocol 2 of the Universal Copyright Convention. Nevertheless, short excerpts from them may be rproduced without authorisation, on condition that the source is indicated. For rights of reproduction or translation, application should be made to the Publications Branch (Rights and Permissions), International Labour Office, CH-1211 Geneva 22, Switzerland. The International Labour Office welcomes such applications. 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ISBN 92-2-105618-X ILO publications can be obtained through major booksellers or ILO local offices in many countries, or direct from ILO Publications, International Labour Office, CH-1211 Geneva 22, Switzerland. A catalogue or list of new publications will be sent free of charge from the above address. 1986 Les publications du Bureau international du Travail peuvent etre obtenues dans les principales librairies ou aupres des bureaux locaux du BIT. On peut aussi se les procurer directement, de meme qu'un catalogue ou une liste des nouvelles publications, a I'adresse suivante: Publications du BIT, Bureau international du Travail, CH-1211 Geneve 22, Suisse. 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Las publicaciones de la OIT pueden obtenerse en las principales librerias o en oficinas locales de la OIT en muchos paises o pidiendolas a: Publicaciones de la OIT Oficina Internacional del Trabajo, CH-1211 Ginebra 22, Suiza, que tambien puede enviar a quienes lo soliciten un catalogo o una lista de nuevas publicaciones. Impreso en Suiza - i - A. FOREWORD This is a paper of the ILO's International Migration for Employment Branch. The objectives of the Branch are to contribute to (1) the evaluation, formulation and application of international migration policies suited to the economic and social aims of governments, employers' and workers' organisations, and (2) the increase of equality of opportunity and treatment of migrants and the protection of their rights and dignity. Its means of action are (a) research and reports, (b) technical advisory services, (c) technical co-operation, (d) meetings and reports and (e) work concerned with international labour standards. The Branch also collects, analyses and disseminates relevant information and acts as the information source for ILO constituents, ILO units and other interested parties. Return migration has become an increasingly topical subject in recent years due in part to the recession that hit Western European States of employment and the large scale temporary engagement of Asian workers in Arab States of employment. Among researchers as well as policy makers there persists the opinion that relatively little is known about return migration or that existing publications yield little useful information. Be that as it may, I thought it might be useful to compile the information that was readily available here in Geneva. The material is arranged by authors in alphabetical order. However, to help readers who are only interested in publications relating to particular regions of migration, each item is preceded by an Identifier, as follows: GE = General, i.e. applies to several regions or return migration generally AF = Africa AS = Asia including Arab States of the Gulf region LA = Latin America, including Guyana, French Gujana, and Suriname NC = Northern America and Caribbean AO = Australian, New Zealand and Pacific Islands WE = Western Europe As items are arranged by authors they are presented only once, but there may be several identifiers. For example, a study on Italian return migrants from the United States may be proceded by NC or WE or both, depending on the apparent focus of the publication. Items concerning Turkey are preceded by WE if the work in question concerns Turkish return migration from Western Europe, but AS would be found if the subject were Turkish return migration from Arab States. - ii - The original version of this bibliography was prepared by Mr. Solon Ardittis during his stay at the ILO in 1984. This second edition is revised partly by the addition of new items and partly by the addition of summaries under existing items. Many of the summaries of English-language terms have been drawn from the outstanding "Sourcebook of evaluative abstracts" by Russell King and Alan Strachan (see p. 76). I am grateful to these two specialists of return migration questions for permitting us free use of their "Sourcebook". A new item or additional information following the regional identifier. is indicated by an asterisk It is intended from time to time to update this bibliography. It would be greatly appreciated if interested readers could supply missing or new items. September 1986 W.R. Bohning * - iii - A. PREFACE Le present document est publie par le Service de la Migration internationale pour l'Emploi. Les objectifs de ce Service sont de contribuer a 1) 1'evaluation, la formulation et la mise en oeuvre de politiques de migration internationale conformes aux buts economiques et sociaux des gouvernements et des organisations d'employeurs et de travailleurs; et a 2) 1'extension de l'egalite de chance et de traitement des migrants, et la protection de leurs droits et de leur dignite. Les moyens d'action du Service sont: a) la recherche et les etudes; b) la fourniture d'avis techniques; c) les activites de cooperation technique; d) 1'organisation de reunions; e) divers travaux relatifs aux normes Internationales du travail. En outre, le Service rassemble, analyse et diffuse des informations relatives aux questions de migrations Internationales pour l'emploi et fait fonction de source de renseignement a l'egard des pays Membres, des Services du Bureau et de tout autre interesse. L*emigration de retour est devenue un sujet d'actualite croissante au cours de ces dernieres annees, en partie a cause de la recession qui frappe les pays europeens d'emploi et du flux massif de travailleurs temporaires asiatiques dans les pays arabes d'emploi. Selon l'avis des chercheurs et des responsables politiques, le domaine des migrations de retour est aujourd'hui relativement meconnu, et les publications disponibles a ce sujet ne suffisent pas a une information de bon aloi. Sans trancher cette opinion, j'ai cru utile de compiler toutes les informations disponibles ici a Geneve. Ce materiel est ordonne par auteurs et par ordre alphabetiaue. Cenpendant, afin d'aider les lecteurs plus particulierement interesses par des publications ayant trait a des regions de migration precises, chaque titre a ete precede d'une cle, de la maniere suivante: GE = General (si la publication se refere a plusieurs pays ou aux migrations de retour d'une maniere generale) AF = Afrique AS = Asie (y compris les Etats arabes de la region du Golfe) LA = Amerique Latine (y compris la Guyane, la Guyane Francaise et le Suriname) NC = Amerique du Nord et les Cara'ibes AO = Australie, Nouvelle Zelande, et les lies du Pacifique WE = Europe de 1'Quest - iv - Les publications etant classees par auteurs, elles n'apparaissent qu'une seule fois, mais elles peuvent etre precedees de plusieurs cles. Ainsi, une etude sur les migrants de retour italiens en provenance des Etats-Unis peut etre identifiee par NC, WE, ou les deux, selon le contenu de la publication. Les titres concernant la Turquie sont precedes par WE s'ils concernent la migration de retour turque en Europe et par AS s'il s'agit d'une emigration de retour depuis les Etats Arabes. La version originale de cette bibliographie a ete preparee par M. Solon Ardittis pendant son sejour au BIT en 1984. Cette deuxieme edition comprend de nouvelles rubriques. Nous avons en outre ajoute des sommaires la ou parfois lis manquaient dans la premiere edition. Plusieurs des sommaires des textes en anglais ont ete etablis a partir du "Sourcebook of evaluative abstracts" de Russell King et Alan Strachan (voir p. 76). Je tiens a remercier ces deux specialistes des questions liees au retour des migrants, pour nous avoir autorise a utiliser librement leur "sourcebook". Les nouvelles rubriques ou toute nouvelle information sont signalees par un asterisk (*), apparaissant apres 1'indication regionale. II est prevu de tenir cette bibliographie a jour. Pour cela, nous saurions gre aux lecteurs interesses de nous signaler toute omission relevee dans le present document et de nous tenir informes des prochaines publications a ce sujet. Septembre 1986 W.R. Bohning * - V - A. PROLOGO Este es un documento publicado por el Servicio de Migraciones Internacionales con Fines de Empleo de la OIT. Los objetivos del Servcio consisten en contribuir a 1) la evaluacion, el diseiio y la ejecucion de politicas en materia de migracion internacional conformes a los objetivos economicos y sociales de los gobiernos y de las organizaciones de empleadores y trabajadores y 2) el ammento de la iqualdad de oportunidades y de trato, y de la proteccion de los derechos y la diquidad de los trabajadores migrantes y de los miembros de sus familias. Sus medios de accion son a) estudios e informes b) servicios de asesoria c) actividades de cooperacion tecnica d) reuniones tecnicas y e) trabajos relacionados con instrumentos y nomas internacionales. El Servicio tambien recopila, analiza y difunde informacion relevante a los miembros y unidades de la OIT y a otras partes interesadas. La migracion de retorno se ha convertido en un tema de creciente actualidad en los ultimos afios debido a la recesion economica que ha golpeado a los paises de empleo en Europa occidental y al movimiento masivo de trabajadores temporarios de origen asiatico para trabajar en los paises arabes. De acuerdo con las opiniones de investigadores y de responsables de politicas gubernamentales, se conoce relativamente poco sobre el fenomeno y las publicaciones que existen al respecto contienen informacion de poca utilidad. Independientemente de la validez de esta corriente de opinion, crei que seria conveniente recopilar todo la informacion disponible en Ginebra. El material recopilado se presenta por autor en orden alfabetico. No obstante, a fin de facilitar su utilizacion por aquellos lectores que solo esten interesados en publicaciones relacionadas con algunas regiones de migracion en particular, cada referenda bibliografica se encuentra precedida de una clave como se indica a continuacion: GE = General - se aplica a varias regiones o a la migracion de retorno en general AF = Africa AS = Asia, inclusive los Estados arabesi d e la regi.on del Golfo LA = America Latina, inclusive Guyana, la Guayana Francesa y Surinam NC = America del Norte y el Caribe AO = Australia, Nueva Zelandia y las Islas del Pac:ifico WE _ Europa Occidental - vi - Como las publicaciones son presentadas por autor, aparecen solo una vez; sin embargo, pueden estar precedldas de mas de una clave. Por ejemplo, un estudlo sobre trabajadores migrantes Italianos que retornan desde los Estados Unldos podria estar precedido de NC o WE o de ambas claves. Las referencias bibliograficas sobre Turquia, para citar otro ejemplo, seran precedldas de WE si se trata de un trabajo relaclonado con la migracion turca que retorna de Europa Occidental: por el contrarlo, seran precedldas de AS si el contenido versa sobre el retorno de trabajadores turcos desde los Estados arabes del Golfo. La version original de esta bibliografia fue preparada por el Sr. Solon Ardittis durante su estadia en la Oil en 1984. Esta segunda edicion incluye nuevas referencias que han sido agregadas a la lista original y diversos resumenes sobre el contenido de aquellas ya existentes. Muchos de los resumenes de los titulos en idioma ingles fueron extraidos de la excelente obra de Russell King y Alan Strachan: "Sourcebook of evaluative abstracts" (vease p. 76). Quedo muy agradecido a estos dos especialistas en cuestiones de migracion de retorno por habernos permitido utilizar su "sourcebook". El asterlsco (*) luego de la clave regional indica que se trata de una nueva referenda o de una informacion adicional a la existente. Se pretende actualizar la bibliografia periodicamente. For consiguiente, quedaria muy agradecido a los lectores interesados que nos hicieran llegar las referencias de publicaciones que hayan sido omitidas o toda publicacion nueva que pudiera aparecer sobre el tema. Septiembre 1986 W.R. Bohning - 1 - Abadan, N. La main-d'oeuvre Turgue en Allemaene Federale. Problemes relatifs aux retours conionctuels (Paris, OCDE, 1971). Abadan, N. "Le non-retour a 1'Industrie, trait dominant de la chaine migratoire turque", Sociologie du Travail, vol. 14, n° 3 (juillet-sept. 1972), pp. 278-293. Abadan-Unat, N. "Turkish external migration and social mobility", in P. Benedict, E. Tunmertekin and F. Mansur (eds.) Turkey: A Geographic and Social Perspective (Leiden: Brill, Social, Economic and Political Studies of the Middle East, 1974) p. 362-402. This paper looks at patterns of social mobility amongst Turkish migrants in the Federal Republic of Germany and on return to Turkey. Most is on the Turks in the Federal Republic of Germany. Poly-annual migrants are subject to great status discrepancies. When abroad they are subject to discrimination based on xenophobia and are accorded a very low status, much lower than they would accord themselves. On the other hand, they are undecided about their social status once returned. This "status inconsistency" plays an important role in reshaping Turkey's stratification scheme but it also offers an explanation for returnees' unpredictable behaviour and ambivalence about where they belong and who they are. For returnees an expected routinized behaviourial pattern has been established which excludes a return to industrial employment - such behaviour is not expected of them. Returnees generally aim to improve their financial situation by investment in real estate and in petty trades and services. Abadan-Unat, N. "Migration as an obstacle for re-integration in industry: The Turkish Case", Studi Emierazione / Etudes Migrations, vol. 13, n° 43 (Sept. 1976), pp. 319-334. The shift in the early 1070s from the free flow of labour to a policy of planned reintegration of returnees is founded on assumptions which have proved to be largely mythical, at least according to the Turkish case. The myth is largely perpetrated by politicians, planners and policy-makers who have maintained, at least publicly, that migrant workers' industrial experience can easily be transplanted to feed Turkish industrial and regional development. It is now realised that this is a rather forlorn hope. Those migrants with real industrial know-how tend not to return. Those who do return tend to avoid industrial jobs, and their training is minimal - they have learned to empty dustbins in Munich, turn a screw at Renault's or wash dishes in Zurich. What Turkey needs are highly skilled, versatile manual workers, foremen and intermediate personnel. Abadan-Unat quotes earlier surveys carried out by herself and the State Planning Organisation which confirm the weak desire of returnees for industrial jobs, a critical review of workers' enterprises and village development co-operatives is presented. One successful industrial enterprise founded on migrant capital and initiative is recounted, a chemical industry located in a sub-district of Ankara province. This case is exceptional but it shows what can be done with sufficient vision, co-ordination and government support. Abadan-Unat, N. Migration and development. A study of the effects of international labor migration in Bogazlivan District (Ankara, Matbaacilik Sanayii, 1976), 386 pp. This is an account of the early work accomplished by the Dutch-sponsored REMPLOD team (Reintegration of Emigrant Manpower and the Promotion of local Opportunities for Development) in co-operation with Turkish scholars from the University of Ankara. The results of field studies in Bogazliyan district show how the departure of a high percentage of economically active manpower for jobs in Europe has altered the life of residents left behind. In this region, emigration to Europe gathered a momentum of its own and reinforced the expulsion of agricultural manpower. Workers' earnings abroad were ploughed back into farm machinery at such a rate that considerable further redundancy from agricultural labour occurred. Patterns of remittance investment were generally totally at odds with theories of balanced growth. One-third of foreign-earned income went on consumer goods, both perishable and durable. Housing was the prime target for investment: renovating old village houses, building new ones, or purchasing a flat in a neighbouring city. Some stimulation of the construction sector occurs, but little long-term development. Farm mechanisation has gone too far, for it has not been accompanied by intensification or new crops. Land speculation has pushed up prices of land. The price of commodities and their value to their owners bear little relation to each other. Finally, a significant proportion of returnee investment has gone on small services and related enterprises: shops taxis, repair services etc. The authors conclude that they cannot claim to have observed any signs of self-.generating development. Development that has taken place is described as "static expansion" resulting in heavy dependency on external processes and decisions. Abete, 6. "Vocational training courses for returning migrants before their departure from the country of immigration and after their arrival in the country of origin", International Migration, vol. 14, no. 1/2 (1976), pp. 120-133. This article looks at the development of the training system in France, United Kingdom, the Federal Republic of Germany and Italy and calls for cooperation between the employers in the country of immigration and training establishments in the countries of emigration. Abou-Sada, G. and Tricart J.-P. (coordinators) L'immigration tunisienne et la question du retour (Lille, ERA-CNBRS, 1982), 200 p. Development schemes for the return of the Tunisian migrants to their home country. Bilateral cooperation, professional training and re-integration projects are explored. Abou Sada, G. "Return migration and the Tunisian politics of return. International return migration Kubat (Rome-New York, Center for Migration Studies, Characteristics of Tunisian migrants, demographic and labour force participation rates. Results of job creation and return migration by 1990. Labor Market", in The in Europer ed. by D. 1984), pp. 15-19. situation in Tunisia a projective study on Abraham, P.M. "Regaining high level Indian manpower from abroad", Manpower Journalr vol. 3, No. 4, (1968), pp. 83-117 This is a comprehensive account of the "Scientists Pool", a programme set up by the Indian Government in 1958 to attract back Indian scientists, technologists and doctors from abroad. The pool is intended to give them a guaranteed temporary placement in government employment until they can find permanent positions. In 1964 eligibility was extended to social scientists. During 1959-67, 4,228 returning Indians were selected for the - 3 pool. Only 2,104 joined. The gap is largely because many found permanent jobs without the pool's interim period. Scientists and engineers need the pool more than doctors. The strength of the pool was fixed at 500 in 1962 but then the ceiling was abolished; however, funds restrict its growth. Period of stay in the pool has lengthened; there is a hard core of "stayers" who have been in it for two years and more. Some have been obliged to leave even though there is no fixed job for them to go to, in order to make way for new returnees. Other measures for attracting back brains are reviewed and there is a legislative appendix. * % *• « AF* Adegbola, 0. "The migrant as a factor in regional development - the case of Ghana returnees in Western Nigeria", Jimlar Muntanef vol. 1 No. 2 (1976), pp. 208-215. It is estimated that about 750,000 people were expelled from Ghana in 1969. Many returned to the poor districts of western Nigeria - a movement in the opposite direction to the expulsion of Ghanaian migrant workers from Nigeria in early 1983. The first part of this paper examines the hypothesis that returnees are more skilled and enterprising than the non-migrants of the region to which they return. 150 returnees in the savanna region of western Nigeria were compared with 300 non-migrants. 26% of returnees were farmers, compared with 91% of non-migrants. Those returnees who were in farming had higher capital input than their non-migrant counterparts, for they had had experience of plantation agriculture, high-yielding crops, fertiliser, mechanical equipment etc. and were regarded as more credit-worthy in raising bank loans for farm development. Many returnees were organised into co-operatives. In non-agricultural jobs returnees were more qualified. Only 8% of returnees were unskilled, compared with 67% of non-migrants. Many returnees had learned specialised trades as well as having acquired business acumen. They had set up many new factories making furniture and other goods. Returnee co-operatives processed starch and tomato puree. Returnees had higher education and their children were receiving more education than the non-migrant sample. The second part of the paper examines strategies for resettlement of returnees. If they go back to their villages they will be too dispersed to be of much use in diffusing development. Adegbola recommends clustering returnees in nodes where they can stimulate the commercial and industrial development of the district - as has happened in the case of Ogbomosho. Returnee-organised marketing co-operatives eliminate intermediaries and increase profits to the farmers. Improvement of physical facilities, e.g. tarred roads, is another area of policy required. Overall, this is an interesting instance of return migration's positive impact but the study leaves many questions about the research methodology used unanswered. AF* Adepoju, A. "Migration and socio-economic change in tropical Africa: policy and research", in Jorge Balan (ed.) Why People Move; Comparative Perspectives on the Dynamics of Internal Migration (Paris, UNESCO, 1981), pp. 317-336. A general review of the literature on migration and rural socio-economic change in tropical Africa. The paper focuses on two main perspectives: the effects of out-migration from rural areas on rural transformation, and the impact of in-migration and return migration to rural areas on agrarian socio-economic change. Most surveys suggest that the remittance system has become an institutionalised feature of the African migration scene. This is true for rural-urban migrants, rural-rural migrants and [0007W] - 4 - international migrants (Nigerians in Ghana prior to 1969, migrants from Upper Volta in the Ivory Coast, migrant workers in Western Europe, and migrants from Botswana, Lesotho and Swaziland in South African mines). Return migration is well-established, yet little studied in Africa. Adepoju stresses the economic and social impacts of returnees, concluding that they are effective agents of change. AF WE Addi, L. "Immigres algeriens: mythes d'un retour", Education Permanente, No. 75 (Septembre 1984), pp. 189-194. WE Adler, S. A turkish conundrum. Emigrationr politics, and development, 1961-80 (Geneva, ILO, August 1980; mimeographed World Employment Programme Research working paper; restricted) Includes a chapter on return migration. AF Adler, S. The organisation of return migration; A preliminary analysis of the recent experience of France and Algeria (Paris, OECD, 1976). Summary of recent procedures designed to facilitate return migration. Education of migrants' children and professional training in France; recruitment, housing, financial and other aspects in Algeria. AF WE Adler, S. Swallows' children. Emigration and development in Algeria (Geneva, ILO, May 1980; mimeographed World Employment Programme Research working paper; restricted). Results of the Algerian policy to facilitate the return of emigrants. AF WE Affari Social! Internazionali, "Problem! dell'Emigrazione", Affari Social! Internazionali, Vol. 10, No. 3 (1982), pp. 29-116. Examines trends relating to second generation immigrants in Western Europe, Eritreans and Tunisians in Italy, Italian workers in Austria and USSR, migrant education, occupational status, return migration, etc., and considers social integration in the Israeli kibbutz. WE Ahern, W.H. "The returned Indians: Hampton Institute and its Indians alumni, 1879-1893", The Journal of Ethnic Studies, vol. 10, no. 4 (winter 1983), pp. 101-124. WE* Akcayli, N. "Problems and recent developments concerning the massive returns to Turkey of Turkish workers in Federal Germany", Turkish Yearbook of Human Rights, vol. 5-6 (1983-84), pp. 99-122. WE* Akre, J. "Migration impact on a Turkish village. A personal account", Migration news , vol. 23, no. 6 (Nov.-Dec. 1974), pp. 17-20. Akre was community development officer in a village in west-central Turkey during 1966-68, and then revisited the settlement in 1971. This brief article records his impressions on the impact of migration on the village and the changes between the 1960s and 1971, including observations on the behaviour of return migrants. Return migration seems to focus around displays of conspicuous consumption and extended leisure. Particularly in the later period, returnees were seen as dominant influences on village social and economic life, especially as value-transmitters. - 5 - WE* Akre, J. "Turkish administrative structures and the migrant worker: towards greater government support and participation", in N. Abadan-Unat et al., Turkish Workers in Europe 1960-1975; A Socio-Economic Reappraisal (Leiden: Brill, Social, Economic and Political Studies of the Middle East, 1976), pp. 187-209. A broad review of the administrative infrastructure surrounding Turkish migration, which includes sections on returning workers, their reintegration problems and the need for follow-up work. Meaningful planning to help returnees is almost impossible with so few statistics on the Turkish return movement. Virtually nothing is done to help returnees find jobs. Job training abroad is minimal, and what little does occur is not utilised. When returnees come back they disappear and no tracing mechanism exists for follow-up work. AF Akrer, J. "Algerie: politique de reinsertion", Hommes et Migrations, No. 942 (1 fevrier 1978), pp. 34-36. GE WE Alexander, S. "A model of population change with new and return migration", Environment and Planning, vol. 15, no. 9 (Sept. 1983), pp. 1231-57. The structure of the model is explored through various assumptions concerned with the constancy in numbers of migrants and in migration rates. An example is given of birthplace-specific movement between Great Britain and the rest of the world. AF "Algerie: L'etat des facilites de retour au pays des travailleurs algeriens", Marches tropicaux et mediterraneans, 39 (aout 1983). Employment policy and vocational training. AF Alouane, Y. "Le retour des emigres dans leur milieu d'origine: Facteur de changement social?", Paper presented at The Workshop of Problems of Development, Organization for the Promotion of Social Science in the Middle East, Khartoum, February 16-19, 1976. WE Alstad,J.A. "A follow-up to the Investigation of Motives for Migration of 1972: a study on return migration", Rapporter fra Statistisk Sentralbvra, no. 82/15 (1982), 93 pp. Analysis of migration over the period 1964 to 1978 including regional variations in migration, length of stay of migrants who eventually return, and changes in the spatial distribution of the population due to migration. LA* Altamirano, T. Migraciones de Retorno en Los Andes (Lima, Peru, Instituto Andino de Estudios en Poblacion y Desarrollo, 1985), 44 p. WE Amaral, Joao Ferreira do "Desenvolvimento emigrantes", paper presented to Conferencia Desenvolvimento. Lisbon, 7-8 October 1982, IED. AF Amicale des Algeriens en Europe "La reinsertion des travailleurs algeriens", Alphabetisation et promotion, 50, (1976), pp. 17-19. regional e retorno de sobre Regionalizacao e AF* Amin, S. "Modern migrations in Western Africa", in Samir Amin (ed.) Modern Migrations in Western Africa (London, Oxford University Press for the International African Institute, 1974), pp. 65-124. - 6 - Amin sees little hope for return migration contributing anything positive to the development of the sending regions. Only in rare individual instances is the returnee an agent of change: he may, for example, become a petty shopkeeper on return, or even a capitalist farmer, hiring labour, but such persons profit from the monetarisation of the economy at the expense of the impoverishment of others, and Amin questions whether such "progress" is really desirable. Even if a migrant has brought back a desire for change through his widened perspectives, it is highly unlikely that he will be able to carry his plans through because the distortion of the allocation of resources to his region deprives him of the elementary framework necessary for success. Emigration impoverishes a region. It prevents the socio-economic structure from undergoing radical progressive change. It is virtually a 'gift' from the poor source area to the rich area. No African region of emigration has ever developed, he maintains. A challenging overview, but little systematic empirical proof is given. WE* AS Anwar, M. The mvth of return: Pakistanis in Britain (London, Heinemann, 1979), 278 p. This book is a sociological study of Pakistanis in Rochdale. In spite of the title few perspectives on return migration are introduced. Whilst the Pakistanis' behaviour tends to reflect an intended temporary stay in Britain, most will probably end up by staying permanently, for economic and educational reasons. AO* WE Appleyard, R.T. "The return movement of United Kingdom migrants from Australia", Population Studiesf vol. 15 (1962), pp. 214-225. Basically a factual, descriptive study. Estimates return movement to be 14.8% of the outmovement from the UK to Australia during 1955-60, rising to 19.2% in 1960. In a 1959 sample 81% of return workers were less than 46 years of age, 67% had been in Australia for less than 4 years, and 76% had had jobs in the professional, intermediate and skilled classes. WE AO Appleyard, R.T. "Determinants of return migration - a socio-economic study of United Kingdom migrants who returned from Australia", Economic Record, vol. 38, No. 83 (1962) pp. 352-368. This paper contains results of interviews with over 100 returnees from Australia returning to their British homeland in 1958-59. Reference is also made to a shipboard study of 32 returnees carried out by the author in mid-1958. Interviews were composed of four parts: general background; preparation for emigration; experience in Australia; and experience in Britain upon return. Most respondents returned for non-economic, familyrelated reasons. Those who did return for economic motives were mostly a small group of nominated Commonwealth migrants who had lived in hostels in Australia and done manual work. The shipboard study indicated a strong weight placed on economic motives but re-interviewing the same respondents one year later showed that reasons had changed to more familyrelated factors. This shows that interviewees subsequently rationalise and change their interpretations of why they return home - a finding of vital significance for questionnaire surveys of returned migrants. Answers may be cover-ups for more deeply held reasons, perhaps too sensitive to talk about in an interview with a stranger. Returnees to Britain complained about the weather, the dingy streets and the humdrum life back home. Expectations about economic prospects and welcoming friends were not upheld: the return was a disappointment and a disillusionment. Over 70% of respondents had plans to go back to resettle in Australia; some already had their passages booked. [0007W] l * - 7 - GE* Ardittis, S. The assisted return of qualified migrants to their countries of origin: the UNDP and ICM multilateral programmes (Geneva, ILO, 1985; mimeographed International Migration for Employment working paper; restricted). Also available in French. This paper examines in detail the methods applied in the implementation of the TOKTEN programme (Transfer of Know-how through Expatriate Nationals), which is administered by UNDP. The author also describes the Return of Talent programmes carried out by the Intergovernmental Committee for Migration (ICM) for qualified nationals of developing countries returning to their countries of origin. WE Arrabito, I. "Analisi delle condizioni strutturali minime per il ritorno dell'emigrante", Affari Sociali Internazionali. vol.11, No. 1-2 (1974), pp. 45-71. Return migration as an agent of democratisation and change in social life. NC Ashton, G.T. "The return and re-return of long-term Puerto Rican migrants: a selective rural-urban sample", paper presented at the Conference on concept and function of culture in Puerto Rico society (Casa blanca, Inter American University of Puerto Rico, Sept. 26-27, 1980). Survey of a group of "ancient" migrants (over 8 years abroad) who have acquired the experience of modernism in the United States. Analysis of the motivations of these returnees. AS* Athukorala, P. Measures to deal with return migrationf Discussion paper submitted to National Workshop on Foreign Employment organised by the Ministry of Labour and the ILO (Colombo, University of Sri Jayewardenapura, July 1985), 18 p. AS* Athukorala, P. Sri Lanka's experience with international contract migration and the reintegration of return migrants (Geneva, ILO, 1986, mimeographed International Migration for Employment working paper; restricted). The author of this study sets out to investigate empirically the success or otherwise of the Sri Lankan scheme designed to advise and train return migrants interested in the establishment of a business. After elaborating the characteristics of the migrants who leave the country and return to it after a certain period of employment abroad, he examines in detail the measures taken by the Government to help individuals through the Ministry of Labour and in conjunction with commercial and statal banks. The author undertakes a specially detailed analysis of the pooling of savings by ten return migrants who set up on their own account in the food business. The support measures are critically evaluated on the basis of the return migrants' background and attitudes, on the one hand, and their inherent limitations, on the other; and the factors that make for success or otherwise are clearly identified. This identification of the factors to which one can attribute the gap between expectations and realisations in this field contains valuable lessons on which policy makers in other countries can draw at the stage of conceptualising or implementing measures in favour of self-employment by return migrants. WE* Atina A. Greek returnees and reintegration in the labour market (Athens, General Secretariat for Greeks Abroad, November 1985) 8 p. (in Greek). [0007W] - 8 Reviews the main economic problems faced by returning migrants and presents the national assistance measures (information, training, incentives) to help return migrants with labour market insertion. WE Augenti, A., Favero, L., Foti, E., Monaco, L. "II reinserimento scolastico degli alunni rientrati dai paesi di immigrazione", in La scuola italiana e eli alunni mierati (Roma, Ministero della Pubblica Istruzione, 1982), pp. 11-83. This study analyses the educational reintegration process of the young Italian returnees. WE Avner, M. "Encouraging Israelis in North America to return to Israel", Labour and National Insurance. Vol. 31, no. 5 (1979), pp. 147-151. GE Awasthi, S.P. "An experiment in voluntary repatriation of high level technical manpower: the scientist's pool", Development Digest, vol. 4, no. 1 (1966). NC* Axelrod, B. "Historical studies of emigration from the United States", International Migration Reviewr vol. 6, no. 17 (spring 1972) pp. 32-49. The thesis of this paper is the error that studies on immigration into the United States make in assuming that no return takes place. The result is that early scholars overestimated the contribution made by immigration to population increase. There were few serious investigations into the return migration of aliens leaving the US. Pior to 1907 there were no statistics kept on the outward movement of aliens. Using estimates of return migration derived from various historical sources, Axelrod concludes that the real net population gain due to immigration in the 19th century was 50-80% of the commonly accepted figures. AS Azim, T. "Race and Repatriation. vol.3, no. 5 (May 1979), 149 p. WE Azmaz, A. Migration of Turkish "Gastarbeiters" of rural origin and the contribution to development in Turkey, Sozialoekonomische Schriften zur Agrarentwicklung, 37 (Saarbriicken, Verlag Breitenbach, 1980), 131 p. Research report examining the impact of rural migrant worker return migration on rural development and economic development in Turkey. Based on a 1976-1977 sample survey. Discusses economic, social and cultural characteristics of resettlement, reasons for return, residence, living conditions, wealth, occupations and income after return, 'urban' expansion, etc., outlines the research method, and includes suggestions on migration policy. WE* Azmaz, A. "Migration and reintegration in rural Turkey: the role of women left behind" Sozialoekonomische Schriften zur Ruralen Entwicklung. Vol. 51 (Gottingen, 1984) 253 pp. This study, which was originally prepared as a doctoral thesis, is concerned with labour migration from Turkey to the Federal Republic of Germany, and particularly with the reintegration of migrants returning to Turkey and the role played by their wives. The data were collected in three of Turkey's eastern provinces and concern migrants and their wives who returned before June 1973. The focus of the study is on the role played by migrants' wives in the process of modernization and social change. [0007W] An Asian viewpoint", Race Today. - 9 - WE* AS Ballard, R. and C. "The Sikhs: the development of South Asian settlements in Britain", in Between Two Cultures: Migrants and Minorities in Britain, ed. by J.L. Watson (Oxford, Basil Blackwell, 1977), pp. 21-56. This chapter is basically about the staged build-up of the Sikh community in Britain but includes some paragraphs on return migration. From its original status as a realistic short-term goal, the idea of return has gradually become a myth which, although increasingly unrealistic, has important social consequences. The myth can be used to explain and justify the settlers' commitment to saving, albeit on a reduced scale compared to the earliest phases; it can be used as a vehicle for the expression of unease about prospects in Britain as racial tensions sharpen; but above all, the myth of return is used to legitimise continued adherence to the values of their homeland and to condemn the assimilation of English cultural values as irrelevant and destructive. Some returns have taken place, often motivated by ill-health in Britain's damp climate, but returnees have found unexpected difficulties. Reasons for non-return are bound up partly with the economics of saving and partly with children's education and progress. WE* Barkin, S. "The economic costs and benefits and human gains and disadvantages of international migration", Journal of Human Resources. vol. 2, No. 4 (1967), pp. 495-516. A carefully set out appraisal of the economic costs and benefits of international migration considered first from the point of view of the individual migrant and then from the point of view of the countries concerned, sending and receiving. At the individual level, the migrant makes certain calculations about returning. Of course, some migrants return for non-economic reasons - loss of contract, family pressures, etc. Others return when they have attained certain goals - the acquisition of capital to buy land, the attainment of a dowry, or of professional qualifications. Another type of calculation is based on perceived opportunities in the home country. Where these are seen as improving (Northern Italy in the 1960s) many migrants return, sometimes encouraged to do so by their own governments' return policies (e.g. Greece and Turkey). But there is little knowledge of the actual experiences of returnees - how many settle in towns or villages, how many set up businesses, how many succeed, how many lose their savings, how many re-emigrate, etc. Greeks who returned from Egypt in the early post-war years have recorded outstanding successes for they had acquired entrepreneurial skills in commerce and tourism. No comparable evidence for European migrants yet exists. WE Barros, J. "Les portugais et le retour", 77 (Sept. 1978), pp. 14-16. AF Bartle, P.F.W. Cyclical migration and the extended community: A West African Example (Leiden, The Netherlands: Afrika-Studiecentrum, 1980), 43 p. Study on return migration in relation to social and ideological values of a community and according to different stages in the life cycles. WE* Baucic I. Effects of emigration from Yugoslavia and the problems of returning emigrant workers (The Hague, Martinus Nijhoff, 1972), 48 p. In 1971 Yugoslavia had 660,000 emigrant workers living abroad in Europe, 66% of them in the Federal Republic of Germany. The first part of this Alphabetisation et Promotion, - 10 - monograph looks at the causes of this movement, individual motives for departure, and spatial variations in the intensity of outmigration. Considerable attention is paid to the destination of remittances and migrant savings. Housing is the main priority. Most migrants return to their settlements of origin, although there are some rural-urban post-return moves. Returnee investment in agriculture generally improves farm production but occasionally over-mechanisation results. In some sectors, however, emigration causes shortages of native labour. In the catering and tourist trades, for instance, Czechs and Poles are brought in. Emigrant workers' prospects for developing industry are negligible because of the role played by Yugoslav banks. Lorries and taxis are often bought by returnees, however, and many migrants have opened up catering and craft establishments. Although the vast majority of Yugoslav emigrants living abroad intend to return, they continually delay coming back because of economic difficulties at home. Those who do return tend to be the less able. Baucic, I. Employment situation of second-generation migrants in Europe: The possibility of voluntary return tof and reintegration intoP the country of origin, and measures that should be adopted. ILO Tripartite technical seminar on second-generation migrants, Lisbon, 1981. (Geneva, 1981, IL0-RER/79/001/Sem.I/l), 41 p. . Paper on voluntary return migration of young second generation immigrants (youth) in Western Europe to their countries of origin. Describes trends of migrant worker employment, considers prerequisites for productive return migration results such as culture and ethnic group integrity, and discusses migration policy measures to expedite return as well as the role of bilateral international cooperation. Baucic, I. Practical measures and activities undertaken for the reintegration of second-generation migrants by the countries of origin. with particular reference to Yugoslav experiences. ILO Tripartite Meeting on the Reintegration of Second-Generation Migrants in Cases of Voluntary Return, Belgrade 1984 (Geneva, 1984, ILO-RER/79/001/SEM.III/3(e)). Baucic, I. "Yugoslavia as a country of emigration", Options Medlterraneennesf vol. 4, No. 22 (1973), pp. 56-66. The latter part of this paper contains some interesting comments and findings on return migration. Baucic finds, on the basis of Dalmatian data, that emigration and return migration entail a double negative selection process for the Yugoslav labour market. Destination countries select the best migrants on departure from Yugoslavia; those who subsequently return to Yugoslavia are the less able of those who have left. Data on remittances are discussed, but the economic importance of remittances is exaggerated, according to Baucic. Savings spent by returned migrants are rarely used to promote long-term future economic development in Yugoslavia. Too much money is spent on needlessly large homes whose size greatly exceeds returnee families' needs. Such houses are built in scattered, unsuitable locations where provision of public utilities is expensive. Investment in farming has been slight. Some returnees buy tractors more as status symbols than as economic investments. Other investments are mostly in craft concerns, road haulage and catering establishments. Baucic believes that Yugoslav emigrants living abroad would be better employed at home. Return migration policies and reintegration programmes should be included in future national and regional development planning. - 11 - WE Baucic, I., Maravic, Z. Conditions de retour des travallleurs emigrants et prevision d'emploi (Zagreb, Institut de Geographie de l'Universite de Zagreb, 1971), 113 p. WE* Baucic, I. "Return migration trends and issues: a global view", International Migration in the Arab World. Proceedings of ECWA Population Conference. Nicosia, Cyprus, 11-16 May 1981, vol. 1 (Beirut, Economic Commission for Western Asia, 1982), pp. 421-440. The author contends that migration can have positive effects for the sending country under the following circumstances: the migrants stay only temporarily in the receiving country; they eventually return to their country of origin; and they remit money saved while working in the host country to their country of origin. Some advantages of temporary migration are discussed, both for the migrant himself and for his country of origin, and three common patterns of emigration and return are described. Most of the examples given reflect the migration experience of Yugoslavia. WE Beange, G. et Oriel, M. "La crise de 1974 et la remise en question des migrations tournantes", Greco 13P 2 (1980), pp. 29-42. WE Bedford, R.D. New Hebridean mobility. A study of circular migration (Canberra, Australian National University, 1973). WE Bedford, R.D. "A transition in circular mobility. Population movement in the New Hebrides 1800-1970", in The Pacific in transition, ed. by H. Brookfield (New York, St. Martin's Press, 1973), pp. 187-228. AF Bedjaoui, M. "Inversion progressive du flux migratoire", intervention a la 7eme Conference des cadres d'Argenteuilf 14-15 dec. 1974, pp. 48-49. AF Belguenday, A. "L'immigration marocaine dans 1'Europe en crise et la formation professionnelle ou le mythe des retours productifs", in L'emigration maghrebine en Europe. Exploitation ou cooperation? (Alger, CRETA), pp. 27-205. AF Belguenday, A. "Le mythe des retours productifs: le cas des emigres marocains", in Les travallleurs migrants dans 1'Europe en crise (Geneve, Conseil Oecumenique des Eglises, Cinquieme Assemblee, 1982), pp. 42-49. AF Belkaid, A., et Remili, A. "Problemes et politique de reinsertion de la main-d'oeuvre immigree en Algerie", Migrants Formation, 8 (Fevr. 1975), p. 1-6. AF Belkhodja, A. "Algerie, premieres experiences de reinsertion", Hommes et Migrations, no. 899 (31 janv. 1976), pp. 19-22. GE Bell, D.N.F., and Kirwan, F.X. "Further thoughts on return migration. A rejoinder to Gordon", Regional Studies, 15 (1981), pp. 63-66. WE Bell, D.N.F. Return Migration in a Scottish context. Discussion paper no. 5 (Glasgow, University of Strathclyde, 1977), 12 p. AF Ben Abdeslam, S. Acculturation et reinsertion socio-professionnelle des adolescents aleeriens immigres (Paris, Universite de Paris V, these de 3eme cycle, 1975). [0007W] - 12 - AF Benamrane, D. Emigration algerienne en France. Politiques et reinsertion et implications du plan des structures et des svstemes d'education et de formation. Le cas de l'enseienemnent secondaire technique (Alger, CREA, 1981), 39 p. WE Benhadji, A. Aspects psycho-sociologiques de la migration temporaire et definitive (Geneve, International Institute for Labour Studies. 1978), 38 PPaper on sociological aspects and psychological aspects of the migrant worker phenomenon, with relationship to the propensity for return migration and the duration of the stay in the host country* Covers the social implications of emigration, the employment problems of return migrants, the implications for economic development. WE Benhadji, A. "Retour et reinsertion des travailleurs migrants dans leur pays d'origine", Bulletin de l'Institut International d'Etudes socialesf 12 (1974), pp. 57-64. WE* Benhadji, A. "Return and resettlement of migrant workers in their home countries", Bulletin, Institute of Labour Studies, 12 (1973), pp. 51-57. The 'quaternary sector' of migration should have a place of its own in development planning. Return and reintegration have to be integrated into such a policy. Three situations are examined: spontaneous return (example of Turkey); organised return (Algeria); and planned resettlement. Under the last of these a number of issues are touched upon: vocational training abroad for jobs upon return; literacy; the principle of rotation of labour planned from the point of view of the country of origin; co-ordination of supply and demand of labour; and facilities available on reception. WE* Bennett, B.C. "On Intra-European migration", Current Anthropology, vol. 19, No. 1 (1978), pp. 217-218. A follow-up note to Rhoades' paper in the previous volume of this journal (see Rhoades 1977). Bennett shows that Rhoades' conclusions do not apply in Croatia (Yugoslavia) where there is considerable return migrant involvement in the growing tourist trade. Detailed data are presented for the Dalmatian island community of Sutivan where there are many highly successful tourist enterprises organised by returned migrants. WE* Bennett, B.C. "Migration and rural community viability in Central Dalmatia (Croatia), Yugoslavia", Papers in Anthropology, vol. 20, No. 1 (1979), pp. 75-83. Examines the causes and effects of emigration and resulting changes in rural viability in the Yugoslav littoral, specifically the island of Brae and the village of Sutivan. Generally the story is of rural decline but there is some description of returnees opening tourist guesthouses. AS* NC Bennett, J.W., Passin, H. and McKnight, R.K. In Search of Identity; The Japanese Overseas Scholar in America and Japan (Minneapolis, The University of Minnesota Press, 1958), 369 p. The authors set out to tackle three main objectives in this book: (i) to study the America-bound student in the historical context of the modernisation of Japanese society and of Japan's cultural relations with the US; (ii) to describe the experiences of individual students in the US and back home in Japan; and (iii) to analyse the process of adjustments of the typical Japanese student to differing cultural environments. To [0007W] - 13 answer these questions numerous Japanese individuals who had been educated in the US were interviewed. There was no formal questionnaire, however, so the research data are not systematic or quantified. They consist of views, opinions, attitudes and interpretations. Nevertheless the clear nature of the text gives a clear piucture of the hopes and fears of the students both abroad and at home. The book is divided into three parts. Part 1 sets out a brief history of Japan's modernisation and the background to the educational links to the US. Part 2 looks at the Japanese student educated in part in America. AF Benouamer, R., and Hemman, A. La reinsertion des travailleurs emigres et la politique de l'emploi dans la strategie de developpement aleerienne (Alger, Institut des Sciences Economiques, 1976). WE Beratungszentrum fur griechische Ruckkehrer des Ausschusses fur Zwischenkirchliche Hilfe und Auswartige Beziehungen der Orthodoxen Kirche Griechenlands Die Griechische Ruckwanderung, Enimerosi 5 (Athens, Thessaloniki, Kavala, April 1982). GE Bernard, G.J. Le retour des migrants. (Paris, Commission Nationale pour inter-ethniques, 1977), 105 p. GE Bernard, P.J. "L'experience Internationale des retours d'emigrants et la recherche d'une strategie de reinsertion dans le pays ou la region d'origine", in L'emigration maghrebine en Europe, exploitation ou cooperation (Alger, CREA), pp. 382 - 401. The economic crisis is not a determinant factor for the return of emigrants. The author analyses the need for a model of productive return migration which would increase the figures of reverse migration. WE* Bernard, H.R., Comitas, L. "Greek return migration", Current Anthropology, vol. 19, No. 3 (Sept. 1978), pp. 658-659. A survey in Athens interviewed 200 returned migrants and 200 non-migrants to see whether migration is related to job skills and to changes in attitude to Greek culture. Non-migrants were better educated than migrants; 80 % of migrants had no marketable skills when they left Greece and 85 % reported that they had acquired no such skills in the Federal Republic of Germany either. Of the 30 respondents who had acquired skills, 13 had used these skills in finding a job upon return. Major differences between the two samples emerged with regard to attitudes to Greek social issues such as divorce, dowries, sex roles and child-rearing. It is not clear, however, whether migrants left in the first place because they were dissatisfied with Greek life, or whether their attitudes are the result of experience in the Federal Republic of Germany. WE* Bernard, H.R. and Ashton-Vouyoucalos, S. "Return migration to Greece", Journal of the Steward Anthropological Society, vol. 8, No. 1, pp. 31-51. Life histories of 15 returning families to Athens from the Federal Republic of Germany show that many of the commonly-held fears regarding the social readjustment of returnees are exaggerated. All the families studied are resourcefully coping with the problems of return, but their views reveal ambivalence to both German and Greek life. Many may become •shuttle migrants' alternating between the two countries, unable to decide which they prefer. Three themes recur in the ethnographic data. Etude bibliographiaue et critique les etudes et les recherches - 14 - First, returning migrants experience a 'reverse culture shock' when they come back. They find many Greek customs backward, yet are relieved to be no longer treated as inferiors as they were in the Federal Republic of Germany. Secondly, there are economic contrasts. Compared with the Federal Republic of Germany, standards of living are low, working conditions bad and jobs scarce. Yet they welcome the chance to run their own businesses, which they could never do in the Federal Republic of Germany. Thirdly, they feel politically insecure in Greece, fearing chaos and a return to dictatorship. Yet in the politically stable Federal Republic of Germany, they had no political voice. WE Bernitt, M. Riickwanderune spanischer Gastarbeiter: Per Fall Andalusien, Materialien zur Arbeitsmigration und Auslanderbeschaftigung, Bd.7 (Koenigstein, Hanstein, 1981), 361 p. Monograph on economic implications and social implications of return migration of Spanish migrant workers from West European industrial countries to Andalusia, Spain. Based on a 1974-75 field study and questionnaire/survey, discusses the economic conditions of the region, Marxist views of the role of industrialisation in alienation and social class consciousness, motivation, occupational status and reintegration of returning workers, etc., and attempts an economic evaluation of their role in the region's economic development. WE Berrocal, L. "The Spanish Euromigration: Returnees and the domestic labor market", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 21-26. Statistical analysis of the distribution of return migrants by employment situation throughout the migratory cycle and their impact on the Spanish labour market. GE Besse, A. "Le retour du migrant", Cahiers d'Anthropologic, 4 (1976), pp. 119-126. Mental diseases caused by non-integration of migrants in the immigration countries, as a factor of return migration. GE Beyer, G. Brain drainr a selected bibliography on temporary and permanent migration of skilled workers and high-level manpower 1967-1972 (The Hague, Martinus Nijhoff, 1972). WE Beyer, G. "Re-emigration and social structure. Return migration of labour and its effects in urban areas of Greece", European Demographic Information Bulletin, Vol. 10, No. 2 (1979) pp. 50-58. GE Beyer, G. "Positive and negative economic aspects of migration of labour, wage, transfer of savings, job opportunities for returnees", paper presented at the International Conference on Cooperative research on immigration and emigration policy (Vienna, 5-8 May, 1975). NC* Bianco, C. The Two Rosetos (Bloomington, Indiana University Press, 1974), 234 p. The book is about Roseto, Pennsylvania, and Roseto Valfortore in the South Italian region of Apulia. It is mostly a collection of interviews and recollections on folk customs and other memories. Some of the interview information is about return migration and prospects for return. A recurrent theme in the views expressed by returned migrants is their dual, ambivalent attitude towards the United States. [0007W] - 15 - WE* Bilmen, M.S. "Educational problems encountered by the children of Turkish migrant workers", in Nermin Abadan-Unat et al., Turkish Workers in Europe 19600-1975: A Socio-Economic Reappraisal (Leiden, Brill, Social, Economic and Political Studies in the Middle East, 19, 1976), pp. 235-252. Many Turkish migrant children return to Turkey just when they have succeeded in adjusting themselves to the social, cultural and educational environment of the foreign country. Numerous difficulties arise from this situation, sometimes leading to grave psychological disturbances. Problems include lack of knowledge of Turkish, different social systems, insufficient knowledge or appreciation of the Turkish cultural background and Turkish values. Although some Turkish teachers teach in Turkish immigrant areas in the Federal Republic of Germany, policies for social and educational reintegration upon return to Turkey are lacking. AF* Birks, J.S. "Overland pilgrimage to savanna lands of Africa", in People on the Move: Studies on Internal Migrationf ed. by Kosinski, L.A. and Prothero, R.M. (London, Methuen, 1975), pp. 297-307. Pilgrimage migration is a little recognised form of spatial mobility which may have wide geographical effects on the areas traversed. This is especially true of Africa where there is a marked ebb and flow of pilgrims heading for and returning from Mecca. Overland pilgrimage takes an average 8 years to complete: 5 on the outward journey and 3 for the return. Most pilgrims travel in family groups. Some West Africans stop in Sudan on the return journey and never reach home. The haj., or Mecca pilgrimage, is thus an interesting and unique form of migration and return. AF* NC Blackett, R.J.M. "Return to the Motherland: Robert Champbell, a Jamaican in early colonial Lagos", Phylon, vol.40 (December 1979), pp. 375-386. Very little is known of the New World blacks who returned to Africa. Although not return in the sense of life-cycle migration, this account is interesting for its uniqueness. It concerns a Jamaican teacher, journalist and businessman who migrated to Lagos in 1862, and the considerable impact he had on the literary and educational life of the city. WE* Blanc, M. and J. "Migration: training and return home", Migration Today, vol. 21, (1977), pp. 109-116. A somewhat superficial article, referring mainly to France and North African migrants, and pointing out the deficiencies in the training of migrants prior to their return home. WE Blauw, W. "Back to the city. A research into return migration of families with children to big cities", paper presented at the International Sociological Association, Uppsala, August 14-19, 1978. This study is part of the STEPRO project of the University of Utrecht. Case studies of 239 families returned to Utrecht. A0 WE Blauw, W., and Elich, J. "The return of Dutch migrants from Australia, New Zealand and Canada", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 229-232. - 16 - WE Blauw, W., and Ehlich, J. "To emigrate and still to return: Dutchmen's emigration and return migration", International Migrationr Vol. 21, No. 3 (1982), pp. 418-424. Proportion of emigrants and return migration from and to the Netherlands. Characteristics and motives of return migration. NC* AS Bleijer, M.L. and Goldberg, I. "Return migration - expectation versus reality: a case study of Western immigrants to Israel", in Research in Population Economics, vol. 2, edited by J.L. Simon and J. DaVanzo, (Greenwich, Conn., JAI Press, 1980), pp. 433-449. This paper uses an interesting theoretical framework for the analysis of return migration, successfully testing it against new data on returning western (mostly American) returnees to Israel. The approach stresses that returns are caused by the failure of expectations to materialise. The authors find that unexpected unemployment is a strong determinant of return migration. They also find that discouraged workers who withdraw from de labour force are more likely to return. Also relevant are housing conditions. Young people, who expect to be affected longer by a given deviation between expectations and reality, are more prone to return. The cost of return, as measured by family size, has a negative effect on return. It also appears that the accumulation of pre-emigration information on the country of destination as well as previous knowledge of the language reduce return probability, presumably because they reduce the gap between expectations and reality. NC Bohland, J. "Models of return migration: case study of American-Indian relocation", paper presented at the Annual meeting of the population Association of America. Seattle, Washington, April 17-19, 1975. WE* Bohmer, J. "Arbeitsemigration turkischer Gastarbeiter: Abwanderung, Ruckwanderung, Investitionsverhalten und landliche Entwicklung" Orient. vol. 25, No. 4 (Hamburg, 1984), 612 p. (in German with summary in English) The results of a study of emigration and return migration conducted in the rural district of Esme, Turkey, are presented. Consideration is given to the impact of migrant savings and returning migrants' skills on economic development in the region of origin. WE Bohning, W.R. "The social and occupational apprenticeship of Mediterranean workers in West Germany", in The demographic and social pattern of emigration from the Southern European countriesf ed. by L. Bacci (Florence, Universita di Firenze, 1972) pp. 175-259. The author finds very little support for the hypothesis that polyannual migrants would generally be equipped with new skills on return and that they adjust to the way of life of an industrial society in the Federal Republic of Germany and absorb its role structures and values. Though they find little difficulty in adapting to the more formal demands of an industrial set-up, they are generally rather unhappy in their place of work. Driven by the desire to earn as much money as possible, they can ill afford to put aside time for industrial or language training. Because of their background and the employer's own interests, migrants are engaged in low-grade positions and on mass-production lines which do not require extensive training. Frustrations both inside and outside of work hamper migrants' learning so that their original internalised roles and norms are left largely intact. If migrant workers are only superficially acquainted with the industrial culture, they are unlikely to be a force of innovation and change in their country of origin when they return. A [0007W] - 17 - worker who has at best marginally improved his skills and at worst totally rejects the way of life of an industrial society has little to offer his home country except some experience of factory work, not much of which is available locally anyway. Bbhning, W.R. "The economic effects of the employment of foreign workers: with special reference to the labour markets of Western Europe's postindustrial countries" in The effects of the Employment of Foreign Workers (Paris, OECD, 1974), pp. 41-123 The conceptual framework of this important study is 'the self-feeding process of polyannual migration from low-wage to post-industrial countries with a liberal capitalist structure'. The model develops in four stages with different return aspects at each step. In the first stage young single male workers predominate and they have a high rate of return. They tend to occupy marginal economic and social positions in the destination country. The high ratio of returning workers to the size of the migrant group is a function of the inter-relationship between the state of labour demand in the receiving country and the original short-term stay envisaged by the migrants. In the second stage the migration stream ages slightly but remains predominantly male. More married migrants come in but they leave their wives behind. Length of stay is extended slightly so that the rate of return falls a bit, although the married component of this second stage intends to return home as soon as possible. However, in the third stage married workers may call up their spouses so that the sex composition changes as more wives and children come in. The rate of return falls further. During the third stage the migration process becomes a self-feeding mechanism as the migrant population generates a significant consumer demand and a demand for various services - housing, schools, social care etc. Finally, in the fourth stage the increasing length of stay and the high degree of family reunion lead to an enlargement of the immigrant population and the appearance of a fully-fledged ethnic economy and society. Rates of return in this mature stage are low. Bbhning sums up: 'The polyannual migrant is constantly torn between wanting to overcome his new deprivations and returning home to a social context where he must feel the old deprivations even more deeply than when he left. The result is that again and again he extends his stay abroad, or he re-emigrates repeatedly after returning home for a short while. Finally this process tends to induce the settlement of a significant proportion of target workers in the receiving country: the migrant becomes an immigrant: the migration stream matures: the difference between target worker migration and settlement migration becomes obscure.' Bbhning, W.R. "Some thoughts on emigration from the Mediterranean basin", International Labour Reviewf Vol. Ill, No. 3 (March 1975), pp. 251-277. Questions migrants' contribution to the development of their countries of origin, particularly as regards the expectation that individuals returning to the modern, urban sector would be harbingers of productive investment and human capital. Concludes that, while there are individual cases which fulfil this expectation, they are irregular and unpredictable and cannot therefore be taken into account by economic and social plans. Proposes a scheme to organise the return movement under a labour market perspective. - 18 - Bbhning, W.R. Return migrants' contribution to the development process: The issues involved (Geneva, ILO, July 1975; mimeographed World Employment Programme Research working paper; restricted) Bbhning, W.R. "International migration in Western Europe: reflections on the past five years", International Labour Reviewr vol. 118, No. 4 (July-August 1979), pp. 401-414. The relevant section of this paper is the author's informed estimates of the strength and magnitude of the post-1973 return flow. He estimates this to be about 1.5 million migrant workers for 1973-77. The bulk of this return flow was from the Federal Republic of Germany, Switzerland and France. Return flows from other countries, such as Benelux and Scandinavia, have been much lower and it is possible that total migrant populations (workers plus their families) have continued to increase in these countries since 1973. A more detailed breakdown is provided of migrants in, and returning from the Federal Republic of Germany, where statisticaldata are more reliable than elsewhere. Bbhning, W.R. Guest worker employmentr with special reference to the Federal Repubic of Germany, France and Switzerland - Lessons for the United States? (Geneva, ILO, June 1980; mimeographed World Employment Programme Research working paper; restricted), reprinted in The border that loinsf ed. by P.G. Brown and H. Shue (Totawa, N.J. Rowman and Littlefield, 1983) and W.R. Bbhning Studies in International labour migration (London and Basingstoke: HacMillan, 1984), pp. 123-162. This paper assembles thoughts on the causes and temporariness of guest worker employment in Western Europe and attempts to draw comparative lessons for the Mexican migration situation to the United States. The nature of temporary and guest worker employment in Western Europe is reviewed, and it is pointed out that restrictions on migrants' rights and on freedom of movement have generally slackened over the post-war period, with the major exception, of course, of the 1973-74 halt to non-EEC recruitment. Western European policy makers have been plagued by the question of how permanent the influx of foreigners is or how temporary it could be made to be. In the Federal Republic of Germany the rate of return is about two-thirds and in Switzerland more than four-fifths of migrants return. There arefurther intriguing differences between migrant nationalities. In the Federal Republic of Germany 9 out of 10 Italian, 8 out of 10 Spanish, 7 out of 10 Greek, 5 out of 10 Yugoslav and 3 out of 10 Turkish workers have returned. These differences call for an explanation. First, migrants' intentions are reviewed. In Western Europe,fewer migrants were short-term return-oriented target workers than were expected. Many, no doubt, changed their minds, as an accumulated absence turned them more into permanent emigrants. Intentions about return therefore need to be treated with care. The second predictor examined, family migration and family reunification, does not appear to be much help either. Nor do a host of other personal, social, economic and behavioural determinants, which are analysed through ranked data. None of the factors at which policies might aim, such as skills or rural origin, fulfil the expectations that have generally been placed in them. GNP per capita is one exception - for it seems that low-income countries reattract less than high incomeones (cf. Turkey and Italy above) - but this finding has limited utility for policy making when there is not much choice about which migrants to admit in the first instance. Irrespective of which position Mexico occupies in the return ratio scale, the theoretically possible manipulation of intentions, of family circumstances - 19 and of selection criteria would probably not change secular trends very much, and would hardly be worth the political and administrative effort. GE* BShning, W.R. "Elements of a theory of international economic migration to industrial nation states", in Global Trends in Migration: Theory and Research on International Population Movements, ed. by Mary M. Kritz, Charles B. Keely and Silvano M. Tomasi (New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1981), pp. 28-43. A general survey of the economic aspects of international labour migration with a section summarising the effects of return migration on the sending countries. The economic role of return migration remains potential rather than actual. Economic processes to do with remittances, returnee savings and skills are outlined. However, the fact that return migration waves are generally caused by the industrial countries dumping their excess labour at times of slump is a tremendous burden to the sending countries. WE BShning, W.R. How many migrant workers have returned home and why? Elements of an answer with data from the Federal Republic of Germanyf ILO Tripartite Technical Seminar on Second-Generation Migrants, 2nd, Granada, 1982 (Geneva, 1982, IL0-RER/79/001/SEM.II/7), 17 p. Conference paper on the level of return migration of migrant workers from the Federal Republic of Germany. Presents statistical tables on foreign workers according to employment, duration of stay, nationality, accompanying family migration (incl. second generation migrant youth and children) and socio-economic factors. WE Bombelles, J.T. Yugoslav migrant workers and their reintegration into the Yugoslav economy (Cleveland, Ohio, Ohio University, 1979), 55 p. NC Bonilla, F., Jordan, H.C. "Puerto Rican return migration in the 70's", Migration Todayf Vol. 7, No. 2, (April 1979), pp. 7-12. WE Borgerard, L.E. Return migration from Sweden to Finland after the second world war. A methodological study (Stockholm, Forskningsprojektet Migrationen Finland-Sverige, 1976). WE Bortot, N. "Reintro degli emigrant! e gli interventi regional!", Affari Sociall Internazionali. Vol. 9, No. 2 (1981), pp. 111-132. Article discussing recent trends in immigration and problems related to return migration in view of regional planning in Italy. Surveys the measures taken and the prospects for policy. WE AF Borzeix, A., Alvarez, P., Marcon, M. La perspective du retour chez les ouvriers algeriens qualifies travaillant dans la metallurgie francaise (Paris, Societe Nationale Siderurgique d'Algerie, 1971). WE* NE Bovenkerk, F. "On the causes of Irish migration", Sociologia Ruralis. Vol. 13, No. 4-5 (1973), pp. 263-275. A snowball sample of 43 people aged 20-40 years in the small town of Castle-Island, Co. Kerry, was asked questions on their attitudes towards emigration and return. The last section of the paper deals with return migration. In a situation of few official statistical indicators, popular impression has it that about one-quarter of Irish migrants have returned. - 20 - But a distinction has to be made between Irish migrants to the US, dominant before 1920, and Irish migration to Britain, dominant after 1920. About one third of Bovenkerk's sample had already worked abroad and were therefore returnees. Few prospective emigrants intended not to return. Return from the US was rarer because of distance and cost: only the successful go back. For Britain it is much easier and cheaper to return and so rates of return are higher. Bovenkerk thinks returnees are more numerous than is generally assumed. GE Bovenkerk, F. Migration des travailleurs. retour au pays et cooperation au developpement; inventorisation critique des opinions courantes et propositions de politique a court terme (La Haye, NUFFIC/IMW00 Projet REMPLOD, 1974), 58 p. GE Bovenkerk, F. The Sociology of return migration: A bibliographic essay (The Hague, Martinus Nijhoff, 1974), 67 p. Despite its now being somewhat out of date, this is by far the most complete and useful compilation of material on return migration. There are chapters on the definition of return migration (by no means a simple matter), on 'laws' of return migration, on types of return migration, on motives for return, on readjustment processes, on the influences exercised by returnees on their home communities, and on research methodology. The essay demonstrates that return migration is by no means the unexplored field that most migration students take it to be - 215 references are cited in the bibliography. The weakness lies in the minimal communication between interested authors and the consequent lack of comparative co-ordination. Bovenkerk concludes by identifying gaps in our knowledge about return migration. These include cross-cultural studies, economic models, evaluations of the effectiveness of government schemes to encourage return, the study of the return of leading individuals, return migrants in novels, and the study of return and innovation. This last topic is regarded by Bovenkerk as the most important, and detailed guidelines prescribing essential research is provided. WE Bovenkerk, F. "Dutch Immigration Policy and the Myth of Return", International Migration,, Vol. 13, No. 3 (1975), pp. 147-150. Based on the Dutch case, this article demonstrates that there is no more voluntary return migration since the beginning of the European economic crisis. Argues that increased return movements will not take place as long as the Netherlands remain economically above the level of Surinam and Southern Europe. LA Bovenkerk, F. Wie gaat er terug naar Suriname? (Amsterdam, Universiteit van Amsterdam, 1976), 112 p. This study on return migration to the Netherlands is based on the case histories of 75 returning Surinamese, who were compared with a smaller control group of Surinamese who did not return. LA Bovenkerk, F. "Why returnees generally do not turn out to be "Agents of change": The case of Surinam", in Return Migration and Remittances: Developing a Caribbean Perspectivef ed. by W.F. Stinner, K. de Albuquerque and R.S. Bryce-Laporte, RUES occasional papers No. 3 (Washington D.C., 1982), pp. 183-215. Characteristic features of the return migration from the Netherlands to Surinam. [0007W] - 21 - Boyd Caroli, B. Italian repatriation from the United States, 1900-1914 (New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1974), 117 p. This study comments on the statistical sources concerning the return of migrants from 1900 to 1914. The author also examines the Italian governmental policy in favour of emigration, to solve internal economic problems. Brettell, C.B. "Vamos celebrar: Emigration and the religious Festa in Northern Portugal", paper presented at The American Anthropological Association, 77th Annual Meeting, Nov. 14-18, 1978. Examines the relationship between church, religion and emigration. The paper demonstrates the way in which the "festa" symbolically and socially reintegrates the Portuguese emigrant into village life. Brettell, C.B. "Emigrar para voltar: a Portuguese ideology of return migration", Papers in Anthropology, vol. 20, No. 1 (1979), pp. 1-20. This excellent paper examines Portuguese migration to and from France. An analytical distinction is made between the goal of return and actual return. The latter is a variable affected by such factors as the immigration policies of the receiving society, the migration policies of the sending society, the employment possibilities upon return and other social, economic and demographic conditions; the former is more dependent upon a series of historical and cultural traditions and attitudes towards migration. This distinction is illustrated through a discussion of what is called the "Portuguese cultural ideology of return migration" which originated with the 19th century returnees from Brazil. There is considerable historical and literary reference to this group and its behaviour. The typical brasileira left poor and returned rich. The principal display of wealth was the casa brasileira, an extravagant house which was the permanent symbol of success and new-found prestige. The brasileira was also impelled to return by saudade - a nostalgic yearning for the homeland. Emigration involved both hope and nostalgia, therefore 'emigrar para voltar' - emigrate to return. This ideology has survived to the present day and Portuguese migration to France. Emigration has become a tradition: not to emigrate means to be left behind, not just literally but culturally and materially too. The annual return involves lavish displays of largesse and wealth which may be more apparent than real. The hardships of life abroad are rarely mentioned. Local festivals are .essentially supported and enjoyed by holidaying returnees. 0s francesas are the new social class in 20th century rural Portugal. Again, the house, this time the casa francesa, is the symbol of success, often resembling French suburban houses. Emigration is the main channel of upward social mobility in Portugal but it also perpetuates rigid stratification. Prestige is associated with the concepts of vanity and jealousy; returnees are deeply involved in both. The village remains the jury of the emigrant's prestige. In fact, emigration brings a curious kind of social mobility, based on the social and geographical distance separating France and Portugal. The Portuguese migrant is a labourer in France, often doing the most menial of jobs, in order not to be working class in Portugal. Return, or intention to return, is fundamental to the entire process. Yet rates of actual return are surprisingly low. French migration policy, especially after 1968, partly explains this, as does the poor employment prospects in Portugal and, until 1974, military conscription. Portuguese migrants in France also become very acquisitive and continue to stay on to attain greater material and social prestige. Yet the intention always remains to return, for this prestige is only conferred on them by their natal village. - 22 - WE Briot, F, Verbunt, G. Immigres dans la crlse (Paris, les Editions ouvrieres, 1981), 191 p. Interviews of migrant workers in France concerning their intentions to return home, in the economic crisis context of the immigration countries. "Better unemployed in France than unemployed in Turkey" seems to be the result of this survey. AS* Brooks, D. "Who will go back", Race Today, vol. 1, No. 5 (Sept. 1969), pp. 132-134. Survey of a London transport immigrant sample concerning the intentions of returning to the West Indies. Statistics indicating that 38% of Britain's coloured immigrants would return if given the financial means to do so are exaggerated. Many want to return but it is more a dream than a concrete likelihood. WE* Brooks, D. and Singh, K. "Ethnic commitment versus structural reality: South Asian immigrant workers in Britain", New Community, vol. 7, No. 1 (1978), pp. 19-30. The bulk of this article is concerned with an examination of the 'myth of return' for three South Asian groups in Britain, the Pakistanis, the Punjabis and the Gujaratis. GE* Bru Bautista, E. "Reattraction of needed skills to developing countries of origin". International Migration, vol. XXIV, No. 1 (Geneva, 1986), pp. 191-196. This paper deals mainly with ILO activities concerning the migration of skilled and highly qualified manpower and ILO studies analysing measures to reattract skilled migrants to developing countries of origin. WE Brunetta, G. "I rientri e le nuove direzioni del flusso migratorio in provincia di Belluno", in Italian! in movimento, ed. by G. Valussi (Pordenone, Grafiche Editorial! Artistiche Pordenonesi, 1978), pp. 283-288. Based on statistical research, this study shows that from 1974 to 1976 600 families, mostly from Switzerland, have been forced to return to the province of Belluno. WE Budzinski et al. Les problemes des migrants qui retournent - Le cas de la Grecef rapport par le Groupe de Travail sur le Retour des Migrants a 1'intention de la 7eme Assemblee Generale du CETMI (Bruxelles, 1982), 83 p. WE* Budzinsky, M., Niessen, J. Auswanderungf Ruckkehr und Einwanderung von und nach Sizilien. Wo ist unsere Heimat, No. 27/84, (Diakonisches Werk, Stuttgart, 1984), 56 p. WE* Buechler, H.C. and J.-M. "Los Suizos: Galician migration to Switzerland", Migration and Development ed. by H.I. Saifa and B.M. Du Toit (The Hague, Mouton, 1975), pp. 17-30. This paper mainly focuses on ethnic identity but contains a number of interesting points on return migration. Instances of remittances used to establish small service enterprises are described. These do have some employment impact. Galicians avoid sending their children to Swiss schools, even when they have resided in Switzerland long enough for free education. The fear that their children could not adapt to Spanish schools upon return is an oft-repeated theme. [0007W] - 23 - WE Buratto, O.F. "L'integrazione del rimpatri in Sardegna. Risultatl di un indagine-pilota", Rassegna dl Servizlo Sozialef Vol. 16 No. 4 (ott.-dic. 1977), pp 77-96. WE Cabezas Moro, 0., Cases, J.I. "Relacion entre politica sobre migraciones y desarollo economicos y la promocion de nuevas posibilidades de empleo para los que regresan", Boletin InformativoF 91 (enero 1976), pp 1-38. NC* Cafferty, P. "Puerto Rican return migration: its implications for bilingual education", Ethnicity, vol. 2, No. 1 (1975), pp. 52-65. Since the early federalist period the United States has rejected public policies which would foster bilingualism in favour of creating an English monolingual society. Today, the strongest demands for bilingualism come from the Spanish-speakers, especially Puerto Ricans. The phenomenon of the retention of Spanish among Puerto Ricans on the mainland, the increasing use of English in Puerto Rico and the growth of "Spanglish" or "the language of the barrio" among Puerto Ricans both on the island and the mainland is new to American society. Since travel between the island and the mainland affects a large proportion of Puerto Ricans, bilingualism and biculturalism, which go hand in hand, should be fostered, not discouraged. By the mid-1960s at least one in three Puerto Ricans had spent some time working and living in the United States. About two-thirds of returning migrants live in urban areas on the island. The majority go back to raise their families, so that many returning children have English as their main language. It is estimated that 100,000 children and adolescents in Puerto Rico do not know Spanish. The fault lies on both sides: on the US for not teaching Spanish and establishing bilingual education; and on Puerto Rico for not recognising English. AF Caillaux, F. Mvthe ou realite? Notes sur les retours auiourd'hui en Algerie (Paris, CIEMM, 1978), 18 p. Interviews by the author in Algeria with political and economic decision makers, staff of trade unions and universities on the theme of return migration. WE AF Caisse Centrale de Cooperation Economique La formation des travailleurs immieres en vue de leur reinsertion dans l'economle de leur pays d'orieine. 1974-1981: Premier bilan du programme francais (Paris, CCCE, 1981). NC* Cajoleas, L.P. "The American-educated foreign student returns home", Teachers College Record, vol. 60, No. 4 (1969), pp. 191-197. Foreign-educated returnees are a particular type of return migrants. Is the change or experience felt by these individuals deeper than for others? Are the problems of readjustment more difficult? This study is based on 50 Education Department PhDs who reported problems of: (i) reconstruction of personal values; (ii) bringing about changes in the home country environment; (iii) criticism of American education; (iv) accepting lower standard of living on return; (v) meeting anti-American attitudes; (vi) low salaries and poor funding for education; (vii) limited job opportunities and overwork. GE* Callea, S. "Different forms, reasons and motivations for return migration of persons who voluntarily decide to return to their countries of origin" International Migration,, vol. XXIV, No. 1 (Geneva, 1986) pp. 61-76. [0007W] - 24 - WE Calvaruso, C. "Return migration to Italy and the labour market", Affari Social! Internazionalir Vol. 11 No. 1 (1983) pp. 115-128. WE Calvaruso, C. "Rientro del migrant! e condizione delle collettivita italiane in Europa", Civitas, 1 (Jan. 1980), pp. 33-46. WE Calvaruso, C. "Return migration to Italy and reintegration of returnees", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europef ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 123-128. Impact of returning migrants on the local labour market, in particular as regards occupational skills and technical knowledge of the returnees. Statistical data on the outflow of Italian migrants from 1964 to 1980 and the geographical distribution of the return flows. AF Camilleri, C. Quelques facteurs psychololgiaues de la representation du retour dans les pays d'orieine chez les ieunes migrants maghrebins de la seconde generation (Paris, Ministere du Travail, 1979). WE* Campus, A. II Mito Del Ritorno; L'emigrazione dalla Sardegna in Europa Lettere degli emigrati alle loro famiglie Anni 1950-1971 (Rome, Editrice Democratica Sarda, 1985), 289 p. WE Canzoneri, R. A highly ramified tree. An American writer returns to his father's roots in Sicily (New York, The Viking Press Publishers, 1976), 89 p. WE Caritas Coimbra 5 P. NC* WE Caroli, B.B. Italian Repatriation from the United States 1900-1914 (New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1970), 110 p. The main contribution that this book makes is to focus attention on the magnitude of return movements taking place from the US in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Although the term repatriation is used, implying forced movements, most returns were voluntary. The book's first section sets out to place returns in the broader context of American history. The Italian pattern is compared with that of other nationalities moving to the US. This section is rather fragmented. The flows to the US are matched to economic cycles but the role of these cycles in influencing return flows is not fully explored. Section 2 deals with the extent and characteristics of returns, aided by numerous tables. A seasonality of movement is identified; immigration into the US is highest during March-May, whilst returns peak October-December. No real explanation can be offered for this. Most returnees were single and less than 40 years old. The third section discusses the reaction of the Italian Government to these returns. The problem was not even recognised at first, and no official action was taken until 1901, when a Commissariat was set up to collect information on emigrants and returnees. This included surveys of remittances and their use. Help was given through the provision of better, cheaper boats to aid returns. Some returnees suffered from problems of drinking and gambling, as well as other illnesses. Impressions of America recorded by returnees were mostly favourable, especially as regards money, freedom, an open political scene, cleanliness and orderliness. The attractions of Italy were family ties, [0007W] Le retour des migrants portueais (Geneve, CICMC, 1973), - 25 homesickness and a kind of longing for the native land. Many undertook repeated returns and migrations with the aim of improving their lot in Italy. For most it was not a return of disillusionment but of convenience. A conclusion summarises the main findings, and there is a good bibliography of works contemporary to the period under study. WE Casciaro, F. Indagine conoscitiva sulla condizione scolastica dei figli deeli emigrati rientrati dall'estero (Rome, ANFE, No. 22, 1977). GE* Cases Mendez, J.I. and Cabezas Moro, 0. "The relation between migration policy and economic development and the promotion of new employment possibilities for returnees (foreign investment and migrant remittances)", International Migration, vol. 14, No. 1/2 (1976), pp. 134-157. This paper concentrates on the economic impact of return migration, especially the remittances, savings and employment aspects. OECD studies show that so far return migrants have had no positive effects on the economies and societies of origin. Few skills are acquired by migrants abroad and those that are, are not relevant to the home country's needs. Those who return are the less skilled anyway. To be economically beneficial, return migration must be organised and efforts must be aimed at attracting back innovative migrants. Emigration countries are happy to receive the savings of their emigrants but have paid little attention to how this money is spent or invested. More effort needs to be directed toward channelling this finance into productive and employment-creating investment. WE Cassinis, U. "Emigrazione e industrializzazione del Mezzogiorno", Studi Emigrazione, No. 13 (Oct. 1968), pp. 513-536. Article calling for rational government policy on return migration, with particular reference to Italians returning to Southern Italy. Includes employment policy, employment service facilities, vocational training and adult education programmes, etc. WE Cassinis, U. "Le migrazioni alia rovescia", Nord e Sud. (1963), pp. 41-46. WE Castillo y Castillo J. "Emigrantes Espanoles: La hora del retorno", Boletin Informatlvof No. 151-152 (enero-febrero 1981), pp. 2-51. WE Castillo y Castillo, J. Spanish Emigration at the crossroads: an empirical study of return migration (Madrid, Centro de Investigaciones Sociologicas, 1980), 270 p. WE* Castles, S. and Kosack, G. Immigrant workers and class structure in Western Europe (London, Oxford University Press for the Institute of Race Relations, 1973), 514 p. Written generally from a Marxist perspective and one of the first studies to be comprehensively critical of the capitalistic labour migration development model, this has become one of the standard texts on European migration. The main purpose of the study is to examine the impact of labour migration on the immigration countries, but there is a section on 'effects on the emigration countries' which includes views on return migration. The thesis that migrants get industrial skills which they can use on return is rejected. Remittances are used unproductively. Rather than helping the sending countries, the authors conclude that labour migration is actually a form of development aid given by the poor to the rich countries. [0007W] Vol. 38, No. 99 - 26 - WE Catalano, F. "Problemes actuels des travailleurs Europe"fObiectif Europe,, 1 (juin 1978), pp. 22-28. Return migration in Europe and second generation migrants. migrants en WE Catalano, F. "I problem! posti dal ritorno dei lavoratori migrant!", Italian! nel Mondof 21 (14 Juglio 1965), pp. 7-12. GE Catani, M., Berthelier, R. "A propos de la psychopathologie de la transplantation. Considerations relatives au cas des migrants, de leurs enfants, et a 1'impossible retour des enfants dans les pays des parents", in Psvchopathology of the transplantation of migrants (Strasbourg, European Science Foundation, 1983), pp. 85-100. WE Cavallaro, R. "Fenomeni di emigrazione di ritorno a Mirabello Sannitico", Proposte Molisanef 3 (1973), pp. 97-103. Results of a survey conducted with the returnees in the Provincia di Campobasso in 1971. These migrants returned to Italy to invest their savings in a productive way. WE Cazorla Perez, J. "Mentalidad "modernizante", trabajo y cambio en los retornados andaluces", Revista Espaflola de Investigaciones Sociologicasr no. 11 (julio-septlembre 1980), pp. 29-53. Results of a 1977 survey conducted in 9 Andalusian villages. Social origin of emigrants, reasons for remaining or returning, economic re-integration in the home country. WE Cazorla, P.J. Emigracion v retorno; una perspectiva europea Instituto Espanol de Emigracion, 1981), 328 p. WE Cecchi, C. "Presupposti del rientro degli emigrant!", Affari social! internazionali. Vol. 7, No. 1 (1979), pp. 137-156. Article discussing problems of return migration in Italy includes a typology of emigration, manpower planning problems, the role of OECD, possibilities of forecasting, regional planning for employment creation. WE CEDEP, Centro de Estudos da Economics of Reintegration mimeographed, 1981). WE CEDEFOP Migrant! e flussi di rientro. Rapporto di ricerca (Berlin, Centro Europeo per lo Sviluppo della Formazione Professionale, 1979), 73 p. Comparison of the professional reintegration in Italy between the adult and the young returnees. WE CEDEFOP Migrant! e flussi di rientro (Berlin, Centro Europeo per lo Sviluppo della Formazione Professionale, 1980), 189 p. AF Centre Interuniversitaire d*etudes mediterraneennes Les travailleurs emigres et le changement urbain des pays d'orieine (Poitiers, Ministere de la Recherche et de 1*Industrie, 1983), 137 p. Papers submitted at the round table of Poitiers (14-15 May 1982) concerned in particular with the reintegration of emigrants in Algeria, Tunisia and Senegal. (Madrid, Dependencia Research Project on the of Emigrants in Portugal (Lisbon, - 27 WE CENSIS Emigrazione forzata di ritorno; esame del dati ufficiali del govern! tedesco e svizzero (Roma), 1976. Forced return migration in Italy, examined through the official statistics of the Federal Germany and Switzerland. WE Centro di Formazione e Studi per il Mezzogiorno Ricerca sull'emigrazione meridionale nelle zone di esodo (Roma, 1977), 208 p. Monograph on the social change effects of emigration on Alta Irpinia and Sicily in Southern Italy. Presents the results of a 1976-1977 survey of the demographic pattern (population decrease), labour mobility, educational level, employment, income, return migration and use of savings, attitudes towards politics, family and society and of trade union and political participation. WE Centro di Formazione e Studi per il Mezzogiorno Progetto di studio operativo sull'emigrazione meridionale nelle zone di esodo. 2 fasef 2 vol. (Portici, 1976). Report on emigration from southern agricultural areas and rural communities of since 1945. Presents the results of a questionnaire survey of the demographic characteristics and educational level of migrant workers, the economic structure of the emigration areas, the consequences of emigration on age structure and labour mobility wages and savings of migrants in Switzerland and the Federal Republic of Germany, various aspects (incl. income utilization, and changes in attitudes and behaviour) of return migration. WE Cerase, F. L'emigrazione di ritorno; innovazione o reazione? L'esperienza dell'emigrazione di ritorno dagli Stati Uniti d'America (Roma, Facolta di Scienze Statistiche, Demografiche e Attuariali, 1971), 302 p. NC* WE Cerase, F. "A Study of Italian migrants returning from the USA", International Migration Reviewr vol. 1, No. 3 (1967), pp. 67-74. Data collected from interviews with 187 Italian returnees from the United States show that two peaks of return occur, one after 6-10 years and another after 30 years or more. These peaks are seen to correspond to the two 'moments' or critical stages in the process of integration in the USA. The first peak reflects the return of those who, having realised some economic gains abroad, seem eager to return to show them off in their native village. They never ceased to have their native village as their reference point. The second peak obviously involves a more prolonged exposure to American integration influences but reflects a final realisation that there are basic obstacles to the migrant's complete integration into American society and that there is a limit to the upward mobility that he can achieve in the US. Many of this group return as retired persons or as elderly and marginal agriculturalists. 49% never worked upon return; 75% of those who did returned to a rural activity. Innovation in farming by returnees is, however, minimal, largely because of their lack of exposure to American farming practices. Cerase concludes that the attitudes and occupations of returning migrants preclude the possibility of their being an innovative force within the socio-economic structure of their homeland. WE* NC Cerase, F. "Nostalgia or Disenchantment: Considerations on Return Migration", in The Italian Experience in the United States, ed. by S.M. Tomasi and M.H. Engel (New York, 1970), pp. 217-239 [0007W] - 28 - In this chapter Cerase first develops his famous four-stage model of return migration: the return of failure, the return of conservatism, the return of innovation and the return of retirement. In a table he indicates modal lengths of absence preceding each return: up to 5 years, 6-10 years, 11-20 years and over 20 years respectively (based on data from 201 interviews). In this chapter Cerase focuses more on post-return economic behaviour. Overall three-quarters of those who worked after their return engaged in agricultural activities. Those who returned after a short period of time tended to become farm labourers. Long-stayers opt for purchasing land or setting up a business of their own. Investment is according to very traditional patterns, typical of petty provincial values. Those who have not worked on return live on savings, pensions or American social security. Non-agricultural return employment is greatest amongst those who return after 11-15 years, although Cerase does not attempt to test his data's significance on this and other issues. The return of "conservatism" is more dominant in the south. Retirees tend to be an isolated and marginal group in village society. They withdraw and are often viewed with a mixture of envy and hostility. Innovative returnees are a minority; their enthusiasm for change is often worn down by local opposition and difficulties - for example the failure to get a business licence or a building permit. Cerase acknowledges that these returnees could, if properly aided, be a force for change and development but his main conclusion is that returnees as a whole have had no influence either on economic development or on political behaviour in the communities concerned. WE* Cerase, F.P. "Migration and social change: expectations and reality. A case study of return migration from the United States to Italy", International Migration Review, vol. 8, No. 2 (1974), pp. 245-262. This is the most thorough account in English of Cerase's important work on return migration and is an extension of his study which was introduced more briefly in his 1967 paper in this same journal. The complete study was based on 243 interviews with returnees conducted in 7 different areas of Italy, four in the south, one in the centre, and two in the north. Three-quarters of the interviewees were male. Most had worked in low-skill occupations in the US or owned small enterprises such as shops. Half the respondents were from agricultural backgrounds before emigrating. The main thesis of Cerase's paper is that the type of return that results is related to the stage in the integration process in America the migrant had reached at the moment of return. Although one can criticise Cerase for assuming a one-dimensional, time-based measure of integration, his four types of return migration seem attractive and have often been quoted in other scholars' work. Cerase's first type of return is the return of failure. This occurs because of the migrant's failure to adapt in the US; his failure to bridge the gap between rural Italy and metropolitan America. Southern Italians are over-represented in this group; most come from a farming background, to which they returned and were reabsorbed almost as if they had never been away. Most migrants, however, stay on in the US, and the process of adaptation sets in. Some migrants, nevertheless, continue to see themselves still totally with reference to their Italian society of origin. Their aspirations are for a relatively speedy return and an elevated status in their own society. This is the return of conservatism, the developmental and social effects of which are limited, indeed they reinforce the traditional pattern. Other migrants begin to adapt and absorb some of the features and values of American life. When this group returns, it [0007W] - 29 brings back new ideas, new goals, new standards - the return of innovation. But because of the adaptation process this group has a low propensity to return. Even when the innovative migrant does return his original aspirations may resurface or he may be prevented from making an innovative impact by the still traditional environment that surrounds him. Finally is the return of retirement: the desire of long-stay migrants to return to a peaceful last few years in their natal villages. This four-stage model is also set out diagrammatically and is supported by questionnaire tabulations. WE Cerase, F. "Expectations and Reality: a case study of return migration from the United States to Southern Italy", International Migration Review. Vol. 8 (1974), pp. 245-262. WE Cerase, F. "L'emigrazione di ritorno nel processo di integrazione dell'immigrato: una prima formulazione", Genus. vol. 23, no. 1/2 (1967), pp. 7-28. GE Cerase, F. "Su una tipologia di emigrati retornati: il ritorno di investimento", Studi Emierazione, vol. 4, no. 10 (1967), pp. 327-350. WE CESE Arbeit mit Ruckkehrer - Konferenz fur Auslanderfraeen Kirchlichen Aussenamtes der Evangelischen Kirche in Deutschland (16. Oktober 1975). WE CETMI Les problemes des migrants qui retournent: Le cas de la Grece. papers presented by the working group on return migration to the 7th General Assembly of the CETMI (Brussels, CETMI, 1982), 83 p. Assisted return migration to Greece, development of rural sector, consequences on urban environment. Interviews of Greek returnees. AF CGT Le retour "volontaire"r ou la campagne du governement et du patronat contre les travailleurs immigres (Paris, INCA-CGT, 1977), 9 p. AF CGT "Echange de lettres franco-algerien du 18 septembre 1980 relatif au retour en Algerie de travailleurs algeriens et de leur famille", Bulletin de 1'Immigration (12 mars 1981), pp. 1-22. WE CGTP-IN Contribution of the General Confederation of the Portuguese Workers. ILO Tripartite Meeting on the Reintegration of Second-Generation Migrants in Cases of Voluntary Return, Belgrade 1984. (Geneva, 1984), 9 p. AF Chaker, R. "Problematique de la reinsertion des travailleurs immigres: quel avenir pour l'emigration algerienne?", Hommes et Migrations, No. 968 (15 avril 1979), pp. 3-20. AF Chaker, R. Quel avenir pour 1'emigration algerienne? Problematique de la reinsertion des travailleurs emigres (Grenoble, Universite des Sciences Sociales, 1978) WE Chansarkar, B.A. "Professional today,(Jan. 1970), pp. 3-7. A0 Chapman, M. "Tribal mobility as circulation: A Solomon Islands example of micro-macro linkages", in L.A. Kosinski and J.W. Webb, Population at microscale (New Zealand Geographical Society, 1976), pp. 127-142. immigrants, do des they move on?", Race - 30 - WE Chariot, M. "Emigres portugais de retour definitif au pays", Migrants Formation, No. 31 (dec. 1978), p. Dl - Dll. WE Chariot, M. "Des jeunes Espagnols se preparent au retour", Formation, No. 38/39 (mars 1980). AF Chariot, M., Demart, M. "Retour des travailleurs migrants en Algerie et strategie de developpement", Migrants Formation, No. 11-12 (juillet-octobre, 1975), pp. 1-8. AF Chazalette, A. "Le retour au pays des families de travailleurs immigres: desirs, departs et conditions de reussite", Migrations-Etudes (21 avril 1979), 30 p. AF Chazalette, A. Le retour au pays des families de travailleurs immigres; Desirs, departs et conditions de reussite (Lyon, Groupe de Sociologie Urbaine, fev. 1973), 163 p. 6E Chazalette, A. "La formation-retour destinee aux jeunes immigres de la deuxieme generation", Migration/Etudes, No. 27 (Janvier 1980). GE Chepulis, R.L. "Return migration: an analytical framework", in The politics of return. International return migration in-Europe. ed by D. Kubat (Rome, New York Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 239-245. Describes the roots, causes and shifts in the direction of labour migration through an analysis at the macro, regional and micro levels. WE Chepulis, R.L. "Migration policies and return migration with particular reference to Yugoslavia", Studi Emierazione, Vol. 18, No. 3, pp. 319-335. Analysis of some of the most recent migratory trends in Europe in the light of labour turnover, integration and assimilation, with particular reference to the changing migration policies of Yugoslavia. LA Chi, S.K.P. and Bogan, M.W. "Etudes sur les migrations et les migrations de retour au Perou", Notas de Poblacion, Vol. Ill, No. 9 (dec. 1975). Study of the selectivity of migration in Peru through a comparison between emigration and return migration in the region of Chancay in Peru. GE Chi, S.K.P., Bogan, M.W. "Des chiffres et des hommes: Les demandeurs d'emploi etrangers, l'aide au retour en 1979", Hommes et Migration. Vol. 31, No. 992 (ler juin 1980), pp. 19-22. AF Chker, R. Quel avenir pour 1'emigration algerienne? Problematlaue de la reinsertion des travailleurs immigres (These de 3eme cycle, Universite des Sciences Sociales de Grenoble, 1978), 250 p. WE Churches Committee on Migrant Workers in Europe The return of migrant workers, report from the General Assembly of the Churches' Committee on Migrant Workers in Europe (7-14 May 1982), 6 p. WE Churches Committee on Migrant Workers in Europe Papers on the main theme "Return migration and regional development", documents for presentation and discussion at the CCMWE Assembly 1982 (7-14 May 1982). [0007W] Migrants - - 31 WE Ciaurro, G. "Rientro degli emigrati", Affari Social! Internazionall, Vol. 8, No. 4 (1980), pp. 59-74. Article surveying and commenting the provisions of regional labour legislation in Italy regarding return migration and the social assistance available to migrant workers and their families. AF CIEM "Les negociations franco-algeriennes", Presse et immigres en France,serie "Problemes et evenements, points de vue", 12, (18-24 septembre 1980), pp. 1-12. LA CIMADE "Amerique latine, retour et reinsertion economique des exiles", CIMADB-Information, No. 11-12 (novembre-decembre 1983), pp. 5-6. LA CIME "L'Amerique Latine accueille plus de migrants europeens qualifies et salue le retour d'Europe de nombreux concitoyens", Bulletin des Migrations (novembre 1977), pp. 1-3 et 7. WE Cinel, D. "The seasonal emigration of Italians in the nineteenth century: From internal to international destinations", The Journal of Ethnic Studiesf vol. 10, No. 1 (Spring 1982), pp. 43-68. This study analyses the figures quoted on declarations made by Italian emigrants at the time of their departure pertaining to their intentions to remain abroad or to return to their home country. WE* Cinel, D. "Land tenure systems, return migration and militancy in Italy", The Journal of Ethnic Studies, vol. 12, No. 3 (Fall 1984), pp. 55-74. This article asks why Italians who left Italy returned in such large numbers. The conclusion reached, after studying the evidence, is that they returned because, in the first place, they never contemplated a permanent resettlement overseas. Emigration was determined by socioeconomic dynamics internal to the regions of the small and medium size land holdings and intense land commercialization. Emigration was the way to generate cash in order to buy land in Italy, and thus introduce changes in the original communities. The relocation overseas was meant to be a temporary phenomenon, not the permanent condition for most Italians. The article establishes that, at least in its origin, the Italian emigration to the United States was different from the emigration of most other European groups. The Italian emigration was not the permanent relocation overseas of large numbers of people in order to start a new life; it was a temporary stage in order to buy land in Italy. The high return migration rates of Italians from the United States find their final explanation in this original design of most Italian emigrants. NC Cintron, Celia Fernandez de, and Vales, Pedro A. Social dynamics of return migration to Puerto Rico (Rio Pedras, Social Science Research Center, University of Puerto Rico, 1975). WE CLAP Le retour vu du Portugal. (Paris, CLAP, 1979), 89 p. WE CLAP "La formation retour: point de vue de la France. Point de vue des pays d'origine (Espagne, Portugal, Senegal)", Alphabetisation et Promotion. 76 (juillet-aout 1978), pp. 23-24. WE Clapier-Valladon, S. Les medecins francais d'outre-mer: psvcho-sociologiQue du retour des migrants. These du 3eme Universite de Nice 1977, 2 vol., 994 p. [0007W] voyage d'etude organise par le CLAP Etude cycle - 32 - WE* Clausse, G. and Guibentif, P. "Der Kreis schliesst sich: Remigration nach Portugal", in H. KSrner and U. Mehrlander (eds.) Die "neue" Auslanderpolitik in Europa - Erfahrungen in den Aufnahme- und Entsendel'andern (Bonn, Forschungsinstitut der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, 1986), pp. 211-230. WE* Collaros, T.A. and Moussourou, L.M. The return home: Socio-economic aspects of re-integration of Greek migrant workers returning from Germany (Athens, Re-integration Center for Migrant Workers, 1978), 658 p. A massive volume which reports the results of a 1976-77 survey of recent Greek returnees from the Federal Republic of Germany, carried out in the high emigration region of Macedonia. Of the random sample of 1,000 returnees drawn up, only 500 could actually be found - the rest had moved within Greece or re-emigrated. This itself is an interesting fact. The book presents a wealth of evidence on reintegration processes and problems. There are 421 tables. Not all, however, are logically or meaningfully constructed and there is much statistical naivete. The book is useful as a source rather than as a polished product: it can be quarried for hypotheses and its results have enormous comparative possibilities with other studies. WE Collicelli, C. "Rientro degli emigrati e nuova Quindicinale Censis di note e commentir No. 9 (1982). WE Collicelli, C. Training of young migrants: Experiences of some European countries of origin. (Geneva, IL0, 1984), UNDP/IL0 European regional project for second generation migrants, WP.10, 48 p. Experiences of training migrants for integration or reintegration of Italy, Greece, Yugoslavia, Portugal, Spain and Turkey. LA Colombia, Servicio Nacional de Empleo Evaluacion del programa de retorno de profesionales y tecnicosf Migraciones Laborales, 13 (Bogota, 1986), 86 p. Report evaluating a programme to encourage return migration among professional workers, scientific personnel and technical personnel to reduce brain drain from Colombia. Includes emigrant/demographic characteristics (incl. age, sex, geographic distribution, educational level, employment and training experience abroad), discusses tax incentives and other motivation to return, and investigates job satisfaction among returnees. NC* Comay, Y. "Determinants of return migration: Canadian professionals in the United States", Southern Economic Journal (Jan. 1971). A study of a particular return group in which Canadian professionals were divided into three employment categories - education, government and industry - and the return propensity for each investigated. The financial factor was felt to be central. Salaries in industry and government were higher in the US, while those in education were higher in Canada. Hence the US held on to Canadian industrialists but Canada attracted back her teachers and academics. In the field of government Canada was also attracting Canadians back, largely due to the difficulties they had in holding important US government jobs. Most returns take place after 2-3 years in the US, and are less likely to occur after an absence of 6 years. Those with graduate education from the US or those holding PhD degrees were less likely to return. The consequences of this situation for Canada are serious, posing the threat of loss of both quantity and quality of professionals. [0007W] imprenditorialita", - 33 - WE* Comisao de Coordenacao da Regiao Centro Emigracao e retorno na Regiao Centro (Coimbra, 1983), 25 p. Analyses the evolution of migratory movements in central Portugal in relation to various development aspects of the region. WE Comite de Redaction de la Revue "Feuillets" "Migrations europeennes. Problemes des retours (synthese de documents)", Hommes et MigrationsP No. 862 (15 avril 1974), pp. 30-35. WE Commare, C. e G. (a cura di) Present! e invisibili. Storie e dibattiti degli emigrant! di Campobello (Milano, Feltrinelli, 1978) 165 p. WE Commission Europeenne Immigres du Service Civil International "Le retour et 1'insertion des travailleurs immigres dans le pays d'accueil et le pays d'origine", Ob.jectif Immigresf 31-32 (mai-aout 1978), p. 1-34. Results of the Seminar held in Prali (Italy) from 30 April to 8 May 1978 on the reintegration of return migrants. WE Compagna, F. "La geografia dei ritorni", Nord e Sudr (1975), pp. 37-51. WE Compagna, F. "Intervento alia Conferenza Nazionale dell' Emigrazione", Affari Sociali Internazionali (1975), pp. 54-55. Proposals for an investment policy in the southern regions of Italy, towards a productive return of the emigrants. WE Compagna, F. "II capovolgimento del saldo migratorio", in G. Valussi (a cura di), Italian! in movimento (Pordenone, Grafiche Editorial! Artistiche Pordenonesi, 1978), pp. 93-100. Geographical approach to the return of emigrants In Italy. GE Conaway, M.E. Circular migration: a summary and bibliography (Council of Planning Librarians. Exchange Bibliography. N. 1250, 1977). WE Confederacao da Industria Portuguesa Contribution presented by the Employers' Organisation, IL0 Tripartite technical seminar on second-generation migrants, Lisbon, 1981 (IL0-RER/79/001/Sem.I/25), 5 p. Focuses on the need to retain and recruit skilled workers in Portugal, return migration. WE Conseil de 1'Europe Comite d'experts sur 1'insertion professionnelle des travailleurs migrants qui retournent dans leur pavs d'origine.rapport 2eme Reunion, Strasbourg, 14-16 mars 1979(Strasbourg, CAHRS, 20 mars 1979), 8 p. WE Conseil de 1'Europe Problemes poses par les retours des travailleurs migrants dans leur pays (Strasbourg, doc. RS 84 (66)). WE* Constantinides, P. "The Greek Cypriots: factors in the maintenance of ethnic identity", in Between Two Cultures: Migrants and Minorities in Britain, ed. by L. Watson (Oxford, Basil Blackwell, 1977), pp. 269-300. Although 1 in 6 Cypriots lives in Britain, this paper is the only one on Cypriot migration which makes any reference to return migration. It is mainly concerned with the maintenance of ethnic identity in London's Cypriot community, but several passages refer to prospects for and patterns of return to Cyprus. The situation is further differentiated by [0007W] vol. 12, No. 3 - 34 - the island's partition after the 1974 Turkish invasion: Greek Cypriots who came to London from the north of the island cannot return to their home villages which are now under Turkish control, their Greek Cypriot populations exiled to the south of the island. Many British Cypriots have invested in property in Famagusta and Kyrenia prior to a planned return: their investments have been lost and the return blocked. Returnees who went back to the north before 1974 often re-emigrated to Britain rather than become refugees in Cyprus. Information is given on patterns of contact with home villages: remittances, holiday visits, more extended returns. Holiday return visits often have a profound effect on British-born Cypriots. This effect can be either positive (the beauty of the island, the friendliness of Cypriots) or negative (language difficulties, the strict moral code). Cordeiro, A. "Crise et immigration: peut-on parler d'un "movement de retour" chez les immigres algeriens?", Les Autresf 1 (decembre 1979), pp. 24-27. Cordeiro, A. and Guffond, J.L. Les Algeriens en France: ceux qui partent et ceux qui restent (Grenoble, IREP-CERER, Mai 1979), 217 p. Cordeiro, A. and Guffond, J.L. "Les travailleurs algeriens quittent-ils la France?" Migrations Etudes. 25 (juillet 1979), 24 p. Cornelisen, A. Flight from Torregreca: Strangers and Pilgrims (London, Macmillan, 1980) 305 p. In this, her third book about the South Italian village of Torregreca, Ann Cornelisen concentrates on emigration. The book is an account of a trip she made, with a woman of the village, to visit emigrants from Torregreca living in Northern Italy and in the Federal Republic of Germany. The last part of the book, 'Back in Torregreca' looks at return migration. Several perceptive but occasionally contradictory, comments are made about returnees. Migrants returning hoping for a new life in the old village find it only to the extent of improving their houses and filling them with new possessions. But the new furniture is tasteless. Returnees tend to stay a group apart in Torregreca society. Returnee children do not play with other children. Some returnee children have language and identity problems. Emigrants pretend their lives abroad were much better and more fulfilling than they really were. Even as returnees, their lives have a strange emptiness: 'they want so desperately to live, and they know they have not, so far'. Corsini, C.A. and Sonnino, E. "The CISP Survey on the families of Italian emigrants abroad", in The Demographic and Social Pattern of Emigration from the Southern European Countries, ed. by M. Livi Bacci (Florence, Dipartimento Statistico Matematico dell'Universita di Firenze, 1972) pp. 279-375. An account of the CISP (Italian Committee for Population Studies) survey of 2,449 families with at least one member who emigrated for the first time since the beginning of 1965. The interviews were carried out in 1970 in three sample regions of north-east, central and southern Italy. Although covering other aspects as well, the interviews covered return migration and remittances in some detail. Frequency of return depends on distance and also, though to a lesser extent, on the length of time spent abroad (longer-stay migrants tend to visit more frequently). In most cases, migrants return for holidays and festivities, though in 10-15% of - 35 - cases return is precipitated by job loss. Seasonal migrants, common in Northern Italy where they move to Switzerland, often remain partially unemployed when they return each year to Italy. Detailed tabulations are provided on the survey data on remittances. Most remittance income is used for family support; there is usually little left over for business investment. Remittances tend to have, therefore, a rather negative social effect on the evolution of zones of origin, because they reduce those factors which drive the inhabitants to internal migration and therefore forestall a permanent exodus. Remittances keep people on the land even though the efficiency of farming decreases; they therefore have a fossilising, stabilising function. WE Cortese, G. "L'esodo della collettivita italiana dalla Libia e le prowidenze predisposte dal governo italiano a favore dei rimpatriati", Africa, 26 (1971), pp. 313-346. Return of Italian emigrants from the Libyan Arab Jamahirya, and the assistance of the Italian government to the returnees. GE Costes, A. "Retours: quelle politique? Quels resultats?", Migration et Pastorale,. 151 (avril-mai 1982), pp. 4-9. WE* Cosmo, G. "Italian emigration movements up to 1940", Banca Nacionale del Lavoro Quarterly Review, No. 28-29 (1954), pp. 70-86. A historical treatment, based largely on official statistical sources, of pre-1940 Italian emigration, with a section on return movements. For the period 1902-1915 it is estimated that 60% of emigrants from Italy to the United States returned, compared to around 40% for South American countries. Migrants from Northern Italy showed a greater propensity to return than those from the Centre and more especially the South. Annual repatriations were 143,281 during 1921-25 and 67,208 during 1931-35., representing 47.3% and 73.0% of new emigrants respectively. Before the First World War the average length of residence abroad of Italy's transatlantic migrants was 3-4 years. These figures show how ill-grounded was Mussolini's statement that Italy had experienced a 'demographic haemorrhage'. Remittance data are also included in the article. GE Couesnon, C. "La formation des travailleurs en vue du retour au pays", Aloha-Info. 2 (juillet 1977), pp. 32-38. WE Council of Europe Secretariat Problems raised by the return home of migrant workers (Strasbourg, 1966). WE Courgeau, D.L. "Premiers migrants, migrants secondaires Populationf Vol. 37, No. 6 (nov.-dec. 1982), pp. 189-193. AF Courgeau, D.L. "Les departs hors de France des travailleurs etrangers, un essai de mesure", Population Vol. 23. No. 4 (1968), p. 609-624. WE Cravinho, J. "Comentario aos relatorios do IED e do CEDEP", Conferencia sobre retorno e reintegracao dos emigrantes (Lisboa, Instituto de estudos para o desenvolvimento, June 1984), 10 p. GE CREDIF "Formation des travailleurs immigres en vue du retour pays"fHommes et Migrations, No. 921 (15 fevrier 1977), pp. 4-14. [0007W] et retours", au - 36 - WE CRES Indagine sulle caratteristiche del lavoratorl che rimpatrlano dopo un periodo all'esteror Atti della Seconda Conferenza Regionale sull'emigrazione, Udine, Regione Autonoma Friuli-Venezia Giulia, 28-30 giugno, 1979. WE* CRES Mercato del lavoro e movimenti migrator! in Friuli-Venezia-Giulia. Indagine sul relnserlmento professlonaler soclale e abltatlvo del lavoratorl rimpatrlati negli ultlml died anni (Udine, CRES, 1982) 7 volumes. Survey of returned migrants in the region of Friuli-Venezia-Giulia. Discusses in great detail economic, social and geographical reintegration and provides ample statistical information. AF* Crisp, J.F. "Voluntary repatriation programmes for African refugees: A critical examination", Refugee Issuesf Working Papers Series, vol. 1, No. 2 (Oxford, Refugee Studies Program, 1984), 25 p. The purpose of this paper is to provide a critical examination of the effort to encourage the voluntary repatriation of refugees to their country of origin in Africa. It contends that the new enthusiasm for voluntary repatriation programmes expressed by some members of the international community has already proved to be misguided and inimical to the interests of the refugees concerned. The paper is in three parts. Part one examines the programme of voluntary repatriation organised for Ethiopian refugees in Djibouti. Part two analyses the efforts that have been made to encourage Ugandan refugees in Southern Sudan and Haut Zaire to return to their own country. The third and final part of the paper provides some conclusions and recommendations. WE* A0 Cronin, C. The Sting of Change: Sicilians in Sicily and Australia (Chicago, University of Chicago Press 1970), 307 p. This study looks at culture change amongst Sicilian emigrants to Australia. The fieldwork consisted of 12 months in a Sicilian settlement of 26,000 and 14 months amongst Italians in Sydney. The main variables related to cultural change are age at emigration, length of absence, education and occupational mobility. Although return migration is not a major part of this study, it is mentioned from time to time, and certain questions on the questionnaire administered to the Sicilians in Sydney concern attitudes towards and plans for return. A very low percentage of interviewees in Sydney were so dissatisfied with their lives in Australia that they wanted to return. Most, according to Cronin, would not dream of returning to Sicily, although many would like to go back for a visit and some do. Some migrants who returned subsequently came back to Australia. Those who return fairly quickly to Sicily - after a year or so in Australia - are called 'quitters' by Sicilians in Australia. But migrants who return after longer stays in Australia, such as the Sicilian who went back after 16 years to open an hotel, are regarded with approval for they obviously overcame the early hard times and profited from the overall emigration experience in Australia. WE CSER "Repertorio delle ricerche sull'emigrazione in Europa", Formez, (1976), 149 p. Critical analysis of the different research studies on return migration to Italy and Southern Europe. WE CSER "Societa (1.7.1967). [0007W] meridionale, emigrazione e ritorni", Selezione Cser - 37 - Cvetic, M. Preformation et formation professionnelles des migrants de la deuxieme generation. dans la perspective de leur (re-)integration socio-professionnelle dans le pays d'origine en cas de retour. ILO Tripartite technical seminar on second-generation migrants, Granada, 1982. (Geneve, 1982, ILO-RER/79/001/Sem.II/4), 37 p. Conference paper on prevocational training and vocational training for second-generation migrant youth (immigrants) involved in return migration to their country of origin. Outlines measures of national and international cooperation in Western Europe and Yugoslavia with a view to employment opportunity and social integration. Dahya, B. "Pakistanis in Britain, transients or settlers?", Race, vol. 14, No. 3 (1973), pp. 241-277. This is a substantial article based on the author's research on Pakistani migrant families in Birmingham and other parts of England, and on fieldwork done in sending villages in Pakistan. Pakistanis in Britain consider themselves to be transients and all they demand of the host society is that they be allowed to work and earn for their families to whom they intend to return. This is how they justify the high male sex ratio, but women are also prevented from coming by male decisions to have them sheltered from British society. Villages of origin visited by Dahya in Pakistan were mostly in Mirpur, the Chhachha and the north-west Frontier. Here he found that migration has not led to new class divisions on the basis of British occupations. A middle caste migrant remains middle caste on return, even though he cleaned lavatories in Britain. This may change in the future: low "service" castes are beginning to claim more mobility on the basis of their British experience. Otherwise, all activity by migrants in Britain is controlled by the family head residing in the Pakistani village. Remittances and savings are spent, in order of priority, on the following: (i) settlement of the debt incurred in financing the migration; (ii) investment in existing land-holding, including purchase of more land; (iii) building a pakka house for the family (such houses are permanent, multi-storeyed brick and cement structures, very different from the crude kachcha huts of non-migrants); (iv) arranging marriages; (v) rural businesses such as a flour mill or brick kiln; (vi) urban shop premises for rental; (vii) rural-urban business such as a transport concern. When abroad the migrant idealises his "old country". He expects to return to his village community of which he still thinks he has an intimate knowledge. He hopes to re-establish all his old ties. But he is disappointed; the place has changed, and as a migrant he is not so much welcomed as fleeced by all those who expect him to display largesse. Several examples are given of this reaction and pattern of behaviour. New village customs have developed specifically for "welcoming" the migrant. The returnee therefore has to try to redefine his situation. The returnee, however, contributes to his semi-alienation back home by his own behaviour - the wearing of foreign suits, expensive wristwatches and fountain-pens, the carrying of document cases (meaningless in a hot climate and in a society where time is not measured and where the population is largely illiterate). He tries superficially to resemble the Pakistani urban professional class, but is easily distinguishable from the local educated elite, and hence exploited. This disappointment leads migrants to glorify and re-identify with Britain, which they disdained when they were actually living there. - 38 - AS NC Daley, C.L. The Chinese as sojourners; a study in the sociology of migration (New York, City University of New York, 1978), pp. 203. The intention to return home and the restrictions placed on female migration. The theoretical framework is tested by an analysis of Chinese migration to the U.S. during 1850-1870. AS* Dandekar, V.M. "India", in The Brain Drainr ed. by Adams, W. (London, Collier-Macmillan, 1968), pp. 203-232. This paper examines in detail the issues raised by one selected case of an Indian academic, trained abroad, who had many difficulties upon return - such as coming to terms with poor facilities, caste, nepotism, corruption etc. Dandekar claims that these problems are greatly exaggerated. AF Daniel, H., and King, M.C. "That they be men. Eight migrants return with a purpose", Migration Todayf 16 (1972), pp. 18-24. GE* Das, Man Singh, "The 'brain drain' controversy in a comparative perspective", International Review of Comparative Sociologyf vol. 1, No. 1 (1971), pp. 55-65. Based on a sample of 1,400 foreign students from 31 countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America, undertaken in 1968-69. The findings suggest that students from Third World countries are less likely to stay in the US than students studying there who come from more developed countries; that there is an inverse relationship between academic status and likelihood of return; and that likelihood of return is strongly related to subject area - agriculture and engineering students being the most likely to return. The author argues that the brain drain is not such a serious problem as it is often made out to be. It represents, to a large degree, an exchange of skills and information rather than a loss. LA Da Vanzo, J. "Repeat migration in the United States: Who moves back and who moves on?", paper presented at the Annual Conference of the Population Association of America, Atlanta, Georgia, April 13-15, 1978. AF* Davies, H.R.J. "The West African in the economic geography of the Sudan", Geography, vol. 49, No. 3 (1965), pp. 222-235. The Sudan census of 1955/6 found 600,000 West Africans out of a population of 10 million. Most were from Nigeria and Chad. Although there are long-established historical connections along the savanna "grassroad" of Africa, their main reason for being in Sudan is the pilgrimage to Mecca, for many are "pilgrim migrants" en route for the Muslim holy cities, or returning home after a visit to Arabia. The total journey often takes many years, and sometimes is never completed. For return migration the chief interest of this article is therefore the contribution of returning pilgrims who stop, permanently or temporarily, on their way back. No estimate is made of this returning group's numbers. But they are a prominent part of Sudanese economic life, both in agriculture and the towns. Their labour is especially vital in the Gezira Scheme. NC* Davidson, B. "No place back home: a study of Jamaicans returning to Kingston, Jamaica", Race, 9 (1969), pp. 499-509. The Jamaicans who are returning seem to be the more successful who have saved up to finance the journey back and the costs of resettling. Now their dreams of returning are realised, they are suffering the shock of [0007W] - 39 the new reality. The years of striving have been in vain. There is little work in Jamaica, housing is dear and scarce, living costs have risen sharply and their own compatriots view them with jealousy and reserve. Many feel that they will be forced to emigrate again. All this, however, is based on a study of only 28 returnees. WE De Angelis, F. "I problem! del ritorno dei Italian! nel Mondo. no. 4/5 (Feb-March 1966). GE* Debart, M.-H. "Measures which host countries and countries of origin could adopt to promote the return of migrants", International Migration, Vol. XXIV, No. 1 (Geneva, 1986), pp. 147-152. WE* Del Campo, S. and Garmendia, J.A. "The return of the emigrants", in International Migration, ed. by G. Tapinos (Paris, C.I.C.R.E.D, 1974), pp. 210-221. Since the intra-European emigrant - as distinct from the overseas emigrant - moves with a feeling of transitoriness, it is reasonable to expect a dialectical relationship between emigration and return. Behaviour in the host country (adaptiveness, consumption, savings, social integration, work training etc.) is therefore controlled by thoughts of return. Generally the life-style of the rural emigrant, socially isolated in a northern industrial city, is conditioned by reference groups which lie outside the host society. Migrants from more advanced sending countries (Italy, Spain, Greece) are predominantly rural; from more backward countries (Turkey, Portugal) there are more urbanites. The Mediterranean migrant is more preoccupied with financial accumulation than with occupational progress. He is interested in social advance in his origin area, not in the destination society to which he is but marginal. Various typologies of return are outlined. There is as yet no sociological investigation of any quality on motives for return. Readaptation problems are more economic than social. Some hypothetical structures for examining effects of return migration and reintegration processes are proposed. Every returning migrant is a potential factor in development but more research on the process of return migration is necessary for an elaboration of a more satisfactory return policy. WE Delavesne, Y. "Retour et developpement", Migrations et Pastorale, 156 (dec. 1982-janv. 1983), pp. 37-40. WE Delegado Episcopal de Migracion "Children of migrants Spain", Migration today, no. 25 (1979). AF Deletraz, P. "Mieux vaut vivre dans notre pays", Masses Ouvrieres, 322 (septembre-octobre 1975), pp. 62-70. WE* Delhaes-Guenther, D. von "Situation und Reaktion von Remigranten in den Entsendelandern - Ueberblick", in H. Korner and U. Mehrlander (eds.) Die "neue" Auslanderpolitik in Europa - Erfahrungen in den Aufnahme- und Entsendelandern (Bonn, Forschungsinstitut der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, 1986), pp. 139-158. WE Delia, E.P. "Return migration to the Maltese Islands in the postwar years", Hyphen, A Journal of Melitensia and the Humanities. Vol. 3, No. 1 (1981), pp. 1-8. [0007W] lavoratori emigrant!", returning to - 40 - This article assesses the extent of the return migration to Malta and Gozo up to 1974, that is, during the years when official data register a very low incidence of Maltese migrant returnees. It comments on Maltese immigration statistics and derives an estimate of the net return flow. Some implications for economic planning of the results obtained conclude the paper. WE* De Oliveira, L.V. "Migrations, caracteristiques du marche du travail et developpement dans la region du Nord du Portugal", in Reunion d'experts nationaux sur les relations entre le developpement economiaue et socialr les migrations et l'emploi dans la region du Nord du Portugal (Paris, OCDE, 1982), 64 p. Examines various socio-economic indicators of northern Portugal's regional economy in relation to internal migration and emigrationreturn. Also provides an analysis on the impact of remittances on the regional productive structure. GE Desbois, G. La formation en vue du retour; mvthe ou realite? (Paris, Credif, 1976), 55 p. WE Descloitres, R. "International migration: its size and character", Emigrant workers returning to their home country. Supplement (Paris, OECD, 1968), pp. 9-14. WE* Devis, T. "International migration: return migrant and re-migrant flows", Population Trends, No. 41 (autumn 1985), pp. 13-20. About one third of migrants entering the United Kingdom each year were born in this country and so are returning to it; a similar proportion of those leaving the UK were born abroad. In this article a detailed account is given of these return migrants; their characteristics and the length of time they spend outside the UK are analysed. Also, of the immigrants who were born abroad about one fifth had entered the UK previously, while one-quarter of all the emigrants born in the UK had left the country on a previous occasion. The characteristics of these re-migrants are also examined here. NC Diarez, J.H. Return migration to Puerto Rico (Berkeley, University of California Press, 1967). GE Dias, M. "La formation-retour des travailleurs immigres: quel type de formation? et au service de quel development?", Objectif Immigresf 34 (jan-mars 1979), pp. 5-10. WE Di Comite, L. "Return immigration in the original region of emigration", Rassegna Economica. vol. 45, no. 4 (Jul.-Aug. 1981), pp. 925-49. Effect of return migration on the regions of Italy that have been important sources of emigration. Socio-economic impact of both internal and international migration. WE Dietzel, K.P. "Die Rolle der ruckkehrenden Arbeiter Entwicklungsstrategie des westdeutschen Imperialismus", Das vol. 13, No. 9-10 (1971), pp. 764-781. WE* Dietzel-Papakyriakou, M. and Land, F.J. "Sozialmedizinische Probleme der Ruckwanderer am Beispiel der griechischen Arbeitsmigranten", Soziale Sicherheit. Zeitschrift fur Sozialpolitik, vol. 34, No. 1 (1985), pp. 16-19 [0007W] in der Argument, - 41 - WE* Dimitras, E. "Greece prepares for the return of her intra-European migrants", Migration News No. 16, (1967), pp. 1-3. Before 1966, 30 % of Greek emigrants to Europe returned home; the 1967 recession in the Federal Republic of Germany, however, increased this percentage, causing considerable concern in Greece about sudden repatriation. This brief article places the current returns in historical perspective, makes suggestions for successful reabsorption and mentions the work of the Christian Institute for Development in studying return migration and its effects. According to Dimitras, "the return of intra-European migrants is undoubtedly good for the country, on condition that it is spread over a period of time, is proportionate to the possibilities of absorption of Greek socio-economic life, and is freely embarked upon by the migrants themselves, the sole judges of what general or particular advantages are to be drawn from a return to Greece". WE Dimitras, E. Enquetes sociologiques sur les emigrants grecs; deuxleme enquete, lors du seiour en Europe occidentale (Athene, Centre National de Recherches Sociales, 1971), 219 p. Social research monograph on emigration of Greek migrant workers and emigrants from Greece to France, Belgium and the Federal Republic of Germany. Presents research results of a survey of the attitudes and experiences of migrants in the host country, their family life, their employment and social integration, and their plans for returning to the country of origin. WE Dimitras, E., Vlachos, E. Sociological surveys on Greek emigrants. 3rd survey: upon the return to Greece (Athens, National Centre of Social Research, 1971), 131 p. Report on a 1964 questionnaire social survey of Greek migrant workers in Western Europe illustrating the effect of emigration on the migrant's social adjustment abroad and on their expectations and attitudes concerning permanent return to Greece. Outlines research results relating to wages in Western Europe, duration of stay abroad, desired daily salaries, occupational choice, financial aid desired. LA Dinerman, Ir. Migrants and stav-at-homes: a comparative study of rural migration from Michoacan. Mexico (La Jolla, 1982), 112 p. Monograph on comparative study of (1) emigration and return migration of Mexicans to the USA, and (2) internal migration (esp. rural migration) within Mexico. Based on a 1980 interview survey of the rural communities of Huecorio and Ihuatzio, examines migration trends since 1960, issues, esp. seasonal unemployment and reduced urban employment opportunities,low agricultural income and standard of living expectations, land tenure and land use, household characteristics, remittances. NC* Dinerman, I.R. "Patterns of adaptation among households of US-bound migrants from Michoacan, Mexico", International Migration Review, vol. 12, No. 4, (1970), pp. 485-501. This paper provides a close-range study of conditions leading to illegal migration from a rural village in Mexico. It is one of the few available studies of illegal migration at its point of origin. Its primary concern is not with individual psychological traits, but with the social network of relationships and mutual obligations conditioning the decision to migrate. Contrary to the author's expectations, men and women did not migrate to raise cash to start some new venture on their return, or even to acquire money for consumer goods. Rather the decision to migrate from [0007W] - 42 - this central Mexican region seems related to the need to replenish cash previously spent on some major expenditure such as a funeral, wedding, children's education etc. Migration is seen as necessary rather than desirable. Few returnees had invested in a business enterprise. Some US manufactured goods, mostly clothing, radios and watches, were brought home, but there was no evidence of extensive acquisition of migrantbought consumer goods. AF Direction de la Population et des Migrations Migrations Informations, 18 (juin 1978). WE Direzione generale dell'Emigrazione e degli Affari social! Guida pratica delle norme emanate dallo stato e dalle region! a favore degli emigrati; Aggiornamento leggi regional! al 2 Maggio 1980 (Roma, 1980), 691 p. Guide to national, local and regional regulations and source legislation pertaining to migrant workers and their return migration to Italy. Covers migration policy issues, esp. retraining, holidays and re-schooling of children and all forms of social assistance, social services and benefits for families, and includes analytical, regional and chronological indexes and a directory of useful addresses. AF Documents Nord-Africains "800,000 repatries a titre definitifs a la fin de l'annee", Documents Nord-Africainsf 500 (novembre 1962). WE* Dolci, D. The Man Who Plays Alone (London, MacGibbon and Kee, 1968), 367 P. The title of the book is taken from the Sicilian proverb, "He who plays alone always wins". The book is a series of dialogues with Sicilians great and humble. The first interviews are with two emigrants back from Switzerland who give different views of their return. The first, who did not get on in Switzerland, was pleased to be back: "When I came back to Sicily, I took heart again. We were back in our own land. I felt better, we all talked the same". For the second the pattern was the reverse: "Up there in Switzerland it seemed like an earthly Paradise. It's a pleasure working with other people, exchanging talk: your mind is opened and your wits are sharpened. But I missed my family so much I had to come back. And then I turned back into a block of wood: I felt I was in Hell". WE Drettakis, E. Yugoslav migration to and from West Germany: 1962-1973. An econometric analysis (Zagreb, Centre for Migration Studies, 1975), 73 p. GE Droit et Liberte "A propos des rapatriements sanitaires des immigres", Droit et Llberte, 15 (avril 1974), pp. 6-7. WE* Douglass, W.A. "Peasant emigrants: reactors or actors?", in Migration and Anthropology, ed. by R.F. Spencer (Seattle, University of Washington Press, 1970), pp. 21-35. In this interesting paper Douglass challenges the view of peasant emigrants as reactors to circumstances beyond their control. By reference to his own study of two Spanish Basque villages Douglass shows that far from being tradition-bound homogeneous peasants beating welltrodden paths to chain-migration destinations, Basque villagers have explored a whole range of "mobility ploys" and are, therefore, at least in part, the architects of their own destinies. Three major categories of physical mobility are discussed: emigration, migration and commuting. [0007W] "Le retour des migrants", - 43 - Each has a range of sub-types with different return migration implications. Emigrants from the two villages have gone to a bewildering variety of destinations (Latin America, US, France, Switzerland and many others) under different forms of emigration: permanent, sojourner and "bird of passage". Even the permanent emigrant can have some home ties: correspondence, return visits. The sojourner returns for longish periods from time to time. The bird of passage retains his roots in the village but works seasonally or for shorter terms abroad. Much the same classification can be applied to internal migrants moving to regional towns or the Spanish capital. Various forms of commuting, including weekly absences, are also discussed. Migration is, Douglass concludes, best looked at as part of the wider question of physical mobility rather than as an isolated behaviour. WE* Douglass, W.A. "Serving girls and shepherders: emigration and continuity in a Spanish Basque village", in The Changing Faces of Rural Spain, ed. by Aceves J.B. and Douglass W.A. (New York, Schenkman, 1976), pp. 45-61. Contrasts the migration and marriage behaviour of males and females in a Spanish Basque village. Female migrants go to France as hotel and domestic workers; they absorb some French culture. Male migrants go to work in French forest camps cutting timber or they emigrate on three-year contracts to American sheep ranches, in both cases living in gangs with other Basques. Return attitudes differ accordingly. Female migrants who return are unwilling to marry a local farmer unless there is the chance of leaving the land to live in a town. AF Dubois, J. "La formation des migrants africains en vue de leur retour dans leurs pays d'origine", Recherche et Realisations. 2 ( 1976), pp. 7-52. GE Dumon, N. "The situation of children of migrants and their adaptation and integration in the host society, and their situation in the country of origin", International Migration, vol. 17, No. 1-2 (1979), pp. 59-75. GE* Dumon, W. "Problems faced by migrants and their family members, particularly second generation migrants, in returning to and reintegrating into their countries of origin", International Migration, Vol. XXIV, No. 1 (Geneva, 1986), pp. 113-128. WE Dunlevy, J.A. "Nineteenth century European immigration into the United States: intended versus lifetime settlement patterns", Economic Development and Cultural Change, 29 (1980), pp. 77-90. WE ECAP-CGIL Aspects linguistiaues et psvcho-sociaux de 1'insertion a l'ecole et au travail des jeunes emigres dans deux zones temoins de l'Umbria et de l'Irpinia (Roma, ECAP-CGIL, 20 Maggio 1977), 72 p. Paper presented to coloquium on children from the Third World. Problems relating to countries of origin. NC Eldridge, H.T. "Primary, secondary and return migration in the United States 1955-1960", Demography, 2 (1965), pp. 444-455. WE* Eikaas, F.H. "You can't go home again? Culture shock and patterns of adaptation, Norwegian returnees", Papers in Anthropology, vol. 20, No. 1, (1979), pp. 105-115. [0007W] - 44 - An anecdotal paper about the return experience of Norwegian-Americans. Only those who had taken American citizenship are considered. There is an attempt to base the returnee experience on Maslow's basic needs (food, shelter, safety, friendship, self-esteem and self-actualisation) using theoretical frameworks derived from Barth, Meadows and Rose. 67 returnees were interviewed in Stavanger, mostly women, Nearly half returned upon retirement. A quarter were married to Norwegians and the rest were either "employed returnees" with jobs in Norway, or parents who moved back with their children. For each group reasons for moving back are given, although the numbers involved are so small that the percentage data quoted are meaningless. Many moved back for nostalgic reasons, for jobs and for social services. But returnees are not accepted or assimilated as easily as they anticipated. As American citizens, they remain a group apart. Some join Norwegian-American clubs. In spite of these and other problems most returnees accommodate fairly well to life in Norway. WE Elich, J.H. and Blauw, P.W. "Inpakken, wegwezen en toch terug", Demogra_fie, No. 47 (Oct. 1982), pp. 1-4. This article examines the pattern of emigration from the Netherlands and considers the factors leading up to the decision to return. WE Elich, J.H., Blauw, P.W. En toch terug (Rotterdam, Universiteit, 1981). Return migration from Australia, Canada and New Zealand. NC* Elizur, D. "Attitudes and intentions of Israelis residing abroad in the U.S. towards returning to Israel", International Migrationr vol. 11, No. 1/2 (1973), pp. 3-14. A survey of 378 postal questionnaires received back from Israelis living in the US. About 80% regard their sojourn in the US as temporary but most do not have immediate or definite plans to return to Israel. Most respondents are living abroad in better economic and housing conditions than they had in Israel. On the other hand, they are less content with their social situation. The following positive and negative factors were identified as important in building up the desire or otherwise to return: (i) a sense of religious, social and national belonging to the Jewish people in Israel; (ii) the wish to educate children in Israel; (iii) the employment dilemma - most migrants left to get better jobs and are uncertain about their job prospects if they return; (iv) many fear a drop in living standards if they return; (v) the bureaucratic procedures discourage many would-be returnees. WE* NC AS Elizur, D. and Elizur R. "The long road back: Israelis residing in France and the United States: their experiences in Israel and abroad and their attitudes toward returning to Israel", in Immigrant Absorption in Israel: Current Research, ed. by Leshem, E. and Rosenbaum J. (Jerusalem, 1978), pp. 113-116. This study examines the degree of readiness to return to Israel among Israelis living abroad in the light of the Israeli government's policy of encouraging the return of Israeli emigrants. The study was based on a sample of 528 Israelis living in the US or France. Only one-third had been born in Israel, however; two-thirds were former immigrants who then left the country. 83% of respondants were interested in returning to Israel, but only one-quarter had definite plans to do so. Assistance in housing, employment, customs duty etc. might make more want to actively return. The degree of readiness to return to Israel increased under the [0007W] Erasmus - 45 - following conditions: where there is a strong emotional bond to Israel; where the individual's reference group wants to return; when an active connection with Israel is maintained (reading Israeli newspapers, speaking Hebrew etc.); and when satisfaction abroad is low. Israelis who emigrate for study purposes have a stronger tendency to return than other groups. Two major categories of affinity to Israel amongst potential returnees are revealed: national-social and material-occupational. Emke-Poulopoulos, E. Problems of emigration and return migration fProblemata metanasteuses palinnostesesl (Athens, Institouto Meletes tes Ellenikes Oikonomias, 1986), 638 p. (in Greek with summary in English). The second part of the book deals with return migration. Consideration is given to factors in receiving countries that have increased pressures for migrants to return to their country of origin, and to factors in Greece that have encouraged such mouvements. The effects of these migrations on employment, production, foreign exchange flows, skills and training, and population structure are emphasized. The effects of migration and return on the individuals concerned are also considered. The problems of second generation migrants are examined, and policy issues are reviewed. Engel, G. "Comparison between Americans living in Israel and those who returned to America", The Journal of Psychology, vol. 75, No. 2 (March 1970), pp. 195-204; part II, ibid. (July 1970), pp. 243-251. Entzinger, H. Return Migration from West European to Mediterranean Countries (Geneva, ILO, March 1978, mimeographed World Employment Programme Research working paper; restricted), 90 p. This paper is probably one of the single most valuable sources for an overall and comparative analysis of return migration from West European to Mediterranean countries. A brief summary can do no more than indicate its contents and major policy relevant conclusions. Introductory sections look at the "recruitment stop" initiated by the Federal Republic of Germany in November 1973 and then followed by other countries; data on returns and social repercussions are also considered. Return migration is then considered in detail from the point of view of three West European countries, the Federal Republic of Germany, the Netherlands and France, and then from the perspectives of four "home" countries Algeria, Greece, Turkey and Yugoslavia. In a long concluding section, Entzinger points out that it is easier to analyse than to solve the problems of return migration. More migrants would be willing to return if conditions of life and work in their own countries could be improved. An integrated, co-operative approach to return migration, for instance as regards training, is stressed. The socio-economic development of home countries is, however, difficult to achieve without the aid of the industrialised nations. Four specific proposals are made in this respect: using returnees more positively as "change agents"; compensating home countries for the losses incurred through migration; making unattractive jobs in the home countries more attractive by improving wages and work conditions; substituting trade and capital investments for migrants. Examples of these policies are given where relevant. Return migration is likely to continue its present downward trend because of the increasing share of permanent migrants in the total stock of migrants. Measures to further encourage migrants' return are unlikely to have much success. - 46 - WE Entzinger, H. Return policies in Western Europe and their implications for second-generation migrants; co-operation between the countries of origin and the countries of employment in extending assistance for the reintegration of second-generation migrants. ILO Tripartite Meeting on the Reintegration of Second-Generation Migrants in Cases of Voluntary Return, Belgrade, 1984 (Geneva, 1984, IL0-RER/79/001/SEM.III/2(e)). WE* Entzinger, H. "Return migration in Western Europe: current policy trends and their implications, in particular for the second generation", International Migration,, vol. 23, No. 2 (Geneva, June 1985), pp 263-290. (In English with summaries in French and Spanish) Return migration in Western Europe is examined, with a focus on government policy, trends and their implications. The need for international cooperation between sending and receiving countries is emphasized. The effects of migration policies on migrants now and in the future are analysed. Particular attention is paid to the questions posed by the expressed desire of a significant percentage of second-generation migrants to return to the countries of their parents' origin. WE* Entzinger, H. "Remigrationspolitik in den Niederlanden", in H. Kbrner and U. Mehrlander (eds.) Die "neue" Auslanderpolitik in Europa - Erfahrungen in den Aufnahme- und Entsendelandem (Bonn, Forschungsinstitut der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, 1986), pp. 87-102. WE Epstein, J. "Forced repatriation. A crime against humanity", Central Europe Journal. Vol. 17 No. 5 (May 1969), pp. 159-162. GE Ersu, P. retournent 1979). WE Ewenczyk, P, Garson, J. P. et Moulier, Y. Retour et developpement: l'exemple espagnol 1960-1978 (Paris, Fondation Nationale des Sciences Politiques, 1978). Statistical data and recent serveys on the return migration flows to Spain. Professional re-integration and the Spanish policy of assistance to return migration. WE* Ex, J. Adjustment After Migration. Research Group for European Migration Problems, Study 13 (The Hague, Nijhoff, 1966), 110 p. This is a psychosocial study of Dutch colonists who left the East Indies to move back to the Netherlands. It concentrates on their adjustment processes after the return to the Netherlands. It seems, however, that few, if any, were actually born in the Netherlands, so the study is not about returned migrants sensu strictu. The repatriation was forced rather than voluntary, following Indonesian independence. The methodology of the study is interesting. The uniqueness of this "ancestral" return migration is worth mentioning too. [0007W] L'insertion professionnelle des travailleurs migrants qui dans leur pays d'origine (Strasbourg, Conseil de l'Europe, - 47 AF Fadayomi, T.O. "Rural migration and rural development: an exploratory study of return migrants in selected rural communities of Nigeria", Journal of Rural Economics and Developmentr Vol. 12, No. 2 (1978-1979), pp. 53-64. Results of a survey of 1,150 households in two villages of the Ishan Division of Bendel State. Analysis of the reasons for return migration in rural areas in Nigeria. AF Fakhfakh. F. "Emigration a partir de Tunis-Sud et le retour des emigres dans la region", Revue tunisienne de Sciences sociales. Vol. 15, No. 53 (1978), pp. 101-139. Article on trends in emigration and return migration of migrant workers from South Tunis. Based partially on a questionnaire/survey of 120 workers, compares the situation of Tunisian immigrants in Western Europe and the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, and covers migrant workers geographic distribution, motivation for emigration, distribution by age group, marital status, educational level and occupation. WE Fakiolas, R. Problems and opportunities of the Greek migrants returning from Western Europer paper presented at the European Science Foundation Workshop on Cultural Identity and Structural Marginalisation of Migrant Workers (Bochum, 10-12 Dec. 1980). WE* Fakiolas, R. "Migratory movements and employment opportunities in Greece", Mediterranean Research Cooperation Project, Athens Seminarf September 1983 (Athens, 1983). The following topics are explored: employment conditions and migratory movements in the post-war period; economic stagnation and rising unemployment since 1980; age and skill structure of the repatriates; economic reintegration of the returnees. WE Fakiolas, R. "Return migration to Greece and its structural and socio-political effects", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 37-43. The causes and destination of Greek emigration from 1968 to 1977. Prospects and effects of return migration in Greece and geographical distribution of the returnees. WE Farina, J.J. Experiences de reinsertion dans leur pays d'origine de travailleurs retournant de l'etranger, Partie II, (Paris, 0CDE, 1966), 16 p. WE Favero, L. "Scuola e rientri: il caso di S. Giovanni in Fiore", Dossier Europa Emigrazione, 10 (1980), pp. 5-8. WE Favero, L. "Situazione scolastica dei figli dei lavoratori rimpatriati. Risultati di una ricerca", Studi Emigrazione/Etudes Migrations, No. 57 (March 1980), pp. 134-152. Educational reintegration of young Italian returnees. WE Favero, L. and Tassello, G. "Schooling of children returning to Italy: Problems in the system", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 129-135. Results of a nationwide survey held in 1979, aiming at finding out the statistical distribution of returnee children in Italian schools. [0351W] - 48 - WE Favero, L, Rosoli, G. Second-generation within the Italian migration movement; Demographic and economic aspects (Geneva, 1982, IL0-RER/79/001/D0C-4), 58 p. Working paper on demographic and economic implications of second-generation Italian migrants (the 0-20 years child and youth age group). Examines emigration and internal migration, trends in return migration to Italy of both youth and school age children, and also return to inland rural areas, and migrant education issues, and includes case studies. GE Federici, N. "La rilevazione statistica delle migrazione: problem!, osservazioni et proposte", Statistica, Vol. 24 No. 3 (Jul.-Sept. 1964), pp. 405-421. General consideration of flaws in the statistics of migration that prevent fundamental analysis of social relationships. Discusses defects in statistics derived from census and population registers, in particular as concerns return migration. WE Fein, A. "Benefits to returning Israelis. Need and eligibility", International Migration, vol. XX, No. 3/4 (1982), pp. 112-124. Analysis of the effect of assistance programmes on the decision to return to Israel. The author criticizes the universal theory of an economic assistance to the returnees and shows that for 58.6% of the Israeli returnees this programme had no effect on the decision to return. NC* Feindt, W., and Browning, H.L. "Return migration: Its significance in an industrial metropolis and an agricultural town in Mexico", International Migration Review, vol. 6, No. 2 (1972), pp. 158-165. An interesting investigation into return migration using life-histories gathered in interviews of 1640 males aged 21-60 years in Monterrey, a large manufacturing city, and 380 males aged 15-64 years in Cedral, a poor rural town. 23% of the Monterrey sample were returnees and 30% of the Cedral sample. Returnees were found to be better educated than the population at large and had better jobs. Most came back before the age of 30 and aimed to find a good job - a case of "purposeful" return migration. In Monterrey returnees found both white collar and industrial jobs. The Cedral sample produced information on reasons for return: 34% came back when they lost their jobs abroad or because their papers were not in order; 21% returned for family reasons; 9% did not like the emigration environment; 8% were attracted by the availability of jobs back home. A useful insight but the data could have been developed more effectively. NC Fernandez de Cintron, C , Vales, P.A. Social dynamics of return migration to Puerto Rico (Rio Piedras, Social Science Research Center, University of Puerto Rico, 1975). WE Ferreira, E.S., Leite Pereira, J., Ferro de Paiva, A. "Contribuicao para o estudo da economia da reintegracao dos emigrantes", Estudos de Economia Vol. 11, No. 2 (Jan-Mar. 1982), pp. 232-240. Article on the economic implications of return migration in Portugal. Considers the potential loss of remittances, discusses employment creation and economic policy measures for facilitating the economic and social integration of returning migrant workers; encourages investment promotion. [0351W] - 49 - WE Ferreira, E.S., and Leite Pereira, J.J.R. "Portugal's accession to the EEC and migration balance", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europef ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 27-30. Return migration as a mechanism of economic development in regard to Portugal's forthcoming membership in the EEC. WE Filias, V. 11-38. WE Filias, V. "Some aspects of the Greek migration problems", in A. Kudat/ Y. Ozkan, eds., Workshop on "The comparative study of the reintegration policy of five European labor exporting countries (Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin), pp. 120-169, WE* Filias, V. "Restructuring of agricultural enterprises by emigration: Greece", in Emigration and Agriculture in the Mediterranean Basin, ed. by C.A.O. van Nieuwenhuijze (The Hague, Mouton, 1972), pp. 122-143. The impact of emigration and return migration on land tenure and the land market is a relationship on which remarkably little work has been carried out. This study provides one or two insights into this dynamic, based on results obtained from questionnaires sent to the local authorities of communities affected by out-migration. A most interesting contrast is found between communities whose migrants have mainly emigrated overseas, and those whose emigrants have left for other European countries. For the overseas migrant, the tendency is to return to the home base and to go back to farming. For intra-European migrants, at least 50 % seek other, non-agricultural jobs on return. AS* Findlay, A. and Samha, M. "Return migration and urban change: a Jordanian case study" in R. King (ed.) Return migration and regional economic problems (London, Sydney, Dover, 1985), pp. 171-184. Examines the nature of recent return migration to Jordan, with particular reference to the capital city, Amman. The study reports on some of the results of a household survey undertaken in early 1984, which sought to examine the relationship between international migration and urbanisation and to contrast the characteristics of current and returned migrants. WE* Foeken, D. "Return migration to a marginal rural area in North-Western Ireland", Journal of Economic and Social Geographvf vol. 2, No. 71 (1980), pp. 114-120. This paper tries to throw light on the numbers, characteristics and motives of return migrants in the Carrick-Boyle area of north-west Eire. A comparison is made between a group of returnees and a group of non-returnees, originally from the same area but now resident in Dublin, Great Britain and the US. Foeken maintains that in order to understand why one individual does, and another does not, return, research must start with the circumstances prevailing prior to the original outmigration. Foeken states that 5.5% of emigrants from Carrick-Boyle have returned, but this could, he acknowledges, be an underestimate. Returnees are the ones who have made less occupational progress abroad than the non-returnees. Based on a sample of 53 males and 26 females, the principal motives for return can be summarised as follows: (i) inherit a farm or shop, males 26.4%, females 15.4%; (ii) to assist family, m 26.4%, f 15.4%; (iii) to marry, m 0%, f 30.8%; (iv) to get a job, m 18.9%, f [0351W] "Emigration - Its causes and effects", NCSR, (1967), pp. - 50 - 7.7%; (v) bought land or farm, m 9.4%, f 0%; (vi) failure to adapt abroad, m 5.7%, f 23.1%; (vii) other reasons, m 13.2%, f 7.7%. These results are interesting, but to be statistically meaningful, the sample must be larger. WE Fondation ECAP-CGIL Le retour au pays d'origine d'emigres italiens et le role que ioue la Fondation ECAP. ILO Tripartite Meeting on the Reintegration of Second-Generation Migrants in Cases of Voluntary Return, Belgrade, 1984. (Geneva, 1984). 12 p. WE* NC Foner, N. "The Jamaicans: cultural and social change among migrants in Britain", in Between Two Cultures: Migrants and Minorities in Britain, ed. by J.L. Watson (Oxford, Basil Blackwell, 1977) pp. 120-150. The last section of this paper is on "the second generation and returned migrants". Second generation Jamaicans are British-born blacks who cannot return home for they are home. Most have had no contact with Jamaica. Returning first generation migrants have been a source of rising aspirations in Jamaica but are also discontented and frustrated by the island's poor living conditions. Many of the Jamaicans interviewed by Foner in London had gone back to settle but then re-emigrated. NC* Form, W.H., and Rivera, J. "The place of returning migrants in a stratification system", Rural Sociology, vol.23, No. 2 (1958), pp. 286-297. This noteworthy article attempts to identify the social place of returned migrants from the US in a small Mexican border town. All males over the age of 14 were interviewed (130); only 33% were non-migrants, the rest were returned migrants and "visiting" migrants back for a short stay. Direct observation suggested the existence of stratification and local individuals identified three broad bands within the 600-strong community. On the basis of occupation, the migrants had undergone considerable status change, 89 % starting off as labourers but only 28 % remaining as such. 24% were landowners or ranchers, and the rest in services or skilled labourers. Migration was a major contributor to these changes, but not the only factor. A property index was calculated on the basis of land ownership, house ownership and overcrowding: the returnees performed better than non-migrants but rated lower than visitors. The same proved true for a socio-economic index based on income and education. Migration has enabled many to move up the social ladder, but not to the very top which continues to be the prerogative of inherited wealth and established family status. WE F0RMEZ Emigrazione e region! meridional!: risultati e indicazioni di una indagine Formez atti del seminario tenuto a Roma il 4 e 5 luglio 1977 (Rome, Quaderni Formez No. 16, 1978), 205 p. Collection of conference papers on the problems of emigration in Southern Italy. Particular reference to the problems of return migration, retraining of migrants and social assistance programmes. WE FORMEZ II reinserimento degli emigrati di ritorno (Rome, 1982), 219 p. Study preceding the constitution of agricultural cooperatives in Sicily of return migrants from the Federal Republic of Germany and Switzerland. WE Foschi, F. L'emigrazione italiana oggi (Roma, Istituto Poligrafico dello Stato, 1978), 139 p. [0351W] - 51 - WE France, Ministere de l'Economie, Ministere du Budget "Guide financier des Francais de l'etranger: Fiscalite, douanes, controle des changes", Documentation francaise, 1980, 93 p. Guide to taxation, foreign exchange and customs regulations for French citizens abroad and in case of their return migration to France. Includes lists of countries with which France has concluded international agreements and bilateral tax agreements. WE* Frey, M. "Direkte und indirekte Riickkehrforderung seitens der Aufnahmelander - Ueberblick", in H. Korner and U. Mehrlander (eds.) Die "neue Auslanderpolitik in Europa - Erfahrungen in den Aufnahme- und Entsende1andem (Bonn, Forschungsinstitut der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, 1986), pp. 15-64. LA Friberg, J "Native, non-native return and non-return migration to a Colombian metropolis", paper presented at the Annual Conference of the Population Association of America, Atlanta, Georgia, April 13-15, 1978. GE Friedlander, S.L. Labour migration and economic growth (Boston, Mass., M.I.T. Press, 1965). WE* Frijda, N.H. "Emigrants overseas", in Characteristics of overseas migrants, ed. by G. Beijer (The Hague, Government Printing and Publishing Office, 1961), pp. 281-305. This monograph concerns a survey of about 1,000 Dutch migrants living overseas. Interviews were carried out before departure and abroad. About 10% (91) had returned meantime and Frijda's paper contains some information on this group. They mainly returned because of social adjustment problems. Often, wives' feelings were important in the decision to return. WE Frittella, A. "Emigrazione di ritorno: politica nazionale ed iniziative regionali", Affari Sociali Internazionalir vol. 7, No.4 (1979), pp. 167-172. WE Frittella, A. "Aspetti scolastici del'emigrazione di retorno: politica ed iniziative nazionali, regionali e locali", Affari Sociali Internazlonali. vol. 8 No. 3 (1980), pp. 93-106. Educational aspects of return migration to Italy. National and regional policies and initiatives. WE Frbhlich, D., and Schade, B. "Zur Frage der Ruckanpassung von Studenten aus Entwicklungslandern", Kolner Zeitschrift fiir Soziologie und Sozialpsvchologie. vol. 18 (1966), pp. 271-299. Evaluation of a small number of extensive interviews with graduates who have returned to their home countries, with special reference to problems of adjustment and re-adjustement. NC* Frucht, R. "Emigration, remittances and social change: aspects of the social field of Nevis, West Indies", Anthropologicaf vol. 10 (1968), p. 193-208. The "social field" of Nevis embraces migrant communities living outside the island, their return patterns and influences, and remittances. Nevisians have migrated to many destinations, but since the 1950s mostly to England. Returns from Curacao and England are mentioned; it seems [0351W] - 52 - that returnees are a small proportion of total migrants. Remittances reflect moral and family obligations and are the main source of income on the island, replacing agriculture which itself has declined sharply. WE Gacey, F. "Retour au Portugal?", Alphabetisation et Promotionr 84 (avril 1979), pp. 17-24. WE Gallais-Hamonno, G., Noirot, D., Poupat, B. "La duree de sejour des travailleurs etrangers en France", Population, 2 (1975). WE* Garmendia, J.A. (ed.) La emigracion espafiola en la encruci.iada - Marco general de la emigracion de retorno (Madrid, Centro de Investigaciones Sociologicas, 1981), 459 p. Analyses the socio-economic patterns of Spanish emigration, with particular reference to France, the Federal Republic of Germany and Switzerland, and various aspects of return migration. Includes a survey of Spanish employers concerning their rating of return migrants' professional skills, trade unionism etc. and the employers' attitude towards recruiting previous migrants. WE AF Garson, J.-P. "The role of return migration in Algerian economic development in the 1980s", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D. Kubat. (Rome, New York, Centre for Migration Studies, 1984), pp.11-14. Motivations to return of Algerians in France and measures undertaken by the Algerian government to encourage return migration and the creation of small enterprises. AF Garson, J.-P. La reinsertion productive des emigres algeriens; Retour et creation d'entreprises (Alger, C.R.E.A., 1981), 26 p. AS Geiss, B. "Turkische Arbeitnehmer: Reintegration bewahrt", Bundesarbeitsblattf No. 9 (1981), pp. 20-23. Reasons for the lack of return migration to Turkey. This article also demonstrates that the 1972 agreement helped reintegration less than the foundation of new enterprises. WE Gentileschi, M.L., and Simoncelli, R., eds. Rientro degli emigrati e teritorio (Napoli, Istituto Grafico Italiano, 1983), 398 p. Survey of 1033 Italian returnees from 1972 to 1977. The study demonstrates that return migration can be of benefit to regional economic development. WE Gentileschi, M.L. "Return migrants to Sardinia: Rural and urban differences", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europef ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 61-65. Reports on a survey of return migrants to Sardinia registered in various communes as returnees between 1972 and 1977. Socio-demographic profile of returnees and impact of return migration on the urbanisation and population growth of these communes. WE Gilkey, G.R. "The United States and Italy: Migration and repatriation", in F.D. Scott, ed. World migration in modern times (Prentice Hall Inc., Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 1968). [0351W] - 53 - WE* Gilkey, G.R. "The United States and Italy: Migration and Repatriation", The Journal of Developing Areas, vol. 2, No. 1 (1967), pp 23-35. An account by a historian of the mass emigration from southern Italy to America in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and of the return flows which developed in the early decades of the present century. Much use is made of contemporary accounts of the behaviour of the returnees and their effects on local society. Generally, "he who crosses the ocean, buys a house". Whole quarters of so-called "American homes" were built in southern provinces. Coming from an impoverished peasant background, returnees came back as bourgeoisie and bought plots of land, often at inflated prices. They no longer showed respect for the traditional hereditary landed gentry. But they also brought back diseases, alcoholism and brash American ways. Their developmental effects were always minimal and localised, because of their poor education and restricted world view. Ultimately the most successful emigrants were those who did not return to Italy but who helped to build America. AS Gitmez, A. Return migration of Turkish workersf paper presented at the First European Conference on International Return Migration (Rome, 11-14 November 1981). AS Gitmez, A.S. Die Riickwanderung der Gastarbeiter (Ankara, Middle East Technical University, 1980). WE Gitmez, A.S. "Geographical and occupational reintegration of returning Turkish workers", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 113-121. Statistical data on the presence of Turkish workers in Western Europe in the 1970s and results of a survey of 1365 returnees conducted in 1978. WE Glacey, F. "Retour au Portugal?", Alphabetisation (avril 1979), pp. 17-24. GE Glaser, W.A. "The migration and return of professionals", paper presented at the International Sociological Association, Research Committee on Migration, University of Waterloo, Oct. 17-20, 1973. GE* Glaser, W.A. "The migration and return of professionals", International Migration Review, vol. 8 (1974), pp. 227-244. A useful summary of the UNITAR (United Nations Institute for Training and Research) study on the migration of professionals. It includes numerous tables which give valuable insights into the long-run migration plans of students studying in different countries, students from different countries, students studying for different careers etc. At the macro level the survey found that most professionals will return but that Canada and the US tend most to hold on to their foreign students and professionals. The decisions to go abroad are the obvious ones - for education, experience, opportunities. The experience is greatly valued and is felt to be useful upon return home. The return is prompted by completion of education, desire to help the home country, and family ties. But there are also frustrations on returning, particularly isolation, lack of research funds, low pay etc. Some re-emigrate but most put up with these problems and stay on at home. et Promotion. 84 - 54 - AF Glaser, W.A., and Habers, G.C. The Brain drain; Emigration and return; findings of a UNITAR multinational comparative survey of professional personnel of developing countries who study abroad (Oxford, Pergamon Press, 1978), 324 p. Monograph reporting on a research project concerning brain drain, study abroad and the return migration of professional workers to developing countries. Supplies survey data on the sociological aspects, economic implications and cultural factors influencing the individual motivation and decisionmaking, and provides information for educational planning and employment policy-making. GE* Glaser, W.A. The Brain Drain: Emigration and Return. UNITAR Research Report (Oxford, Pergamon Press, 1978), 324 p. "Brain drain" is an emotive topic in the migration histories of Third World countries. This book summarises the results of a widely circulated questionnaire given to: (a) foreign students in three developed countries; (b) professionals who had returned to eight developing countries; and (c) professionals who had emigrated but had not yet returned. The findings are based on some 6,500 responses and are organised under the following themes. Firstly, the overall pattern of migration shows a strong commitment to the home country both by students and by professionals. Work or a stay abroad is viewed as part of necessary experience. Secondly, there are variations on home countries; not all attract home an equal proportion of emigrants; this depends on employment prospects and on discrimination at home and abroad. Thirdly, countries of immigration vary in their openness to this type of foreign migrant. Traditional links between developed and developing countries are important. Fourthly, there are variations in specialities. Agronomists, business and philosophy graduates are most likely to return; linguistic, educationalists, architects and biologists less likely. Not all returnees opt for specialist employment; some go for administration and more general employment. Many that do not return feel their skills would be wasted were they to do so. Fifthly, motives for return or staying abroad hinge around the desire to contribute to the home country, family ties and children's education. Ties with home are very important and take the form of pledges, contacts with relatives and other compatriots, dealings with government officials and occasional visits. The more frequent these visits are, the more likely is a definitive return. Sixthly, losses and gains are weighed up. No clear pattern emerges. The least able are more likely to return. Most individuals send home remittances if they are earning. Overall, the book is clearly set out, easily read and contains an excellent annotated bibliography on professional emigration. WE* Gmelch, G. "Irish return migration: the socio-demographic characteristics of return migrants", Papers in Anthropologyf vol. 20, No. 1, (1979), pp. 155-166. Ireland has changed from a net emigration to a net immigration country. Recent data suggest an annual net inflow of 8,500 persons. In the year before the 1971 census over 13,000 emigrants returned. This paper examines a number of socio-demographic variables of returnees: sex, age, marital status, period of absence, community size of foreign and Irish residence, and occupation before and after return. Survey data were collected during 1977-78 from 606 return migrants interviewed in western Ireland. Sex and age data are from the 1971 census. The sex ratio of returnees is even; 60% returned between the ages of 20 and 34; women [0351W] - 55 - returning are on average two years younger than men. A sub-mode of returnees are in the 65-69 age group; these are "retirees". Mean absence abroad is 17.5 years, but the survey was biased towards long-stayers. 89% of respondents were single when they emigrated; 69% were married when they returned. All but 10% had chosen Irish spouses, mostly originating from close to home. Returnees had been mostly in Great Britain, the US and Canada; England alone contributed 69%. Most had been in big cities. 58% of "American" returnees were from New York; 51% of "British" returnees had been in London. 74% of the interview sample had resettled in or near their original home community. Married couples were more likely to resettle in the husband's home locality than the wife's. Some returnees, but not many, had acquired new occupational skills and technical training whilst abroad. Overall, returnees nevertheless occupy higher status jobs than the non-migrant populations of the survey region. WE* Gmelch, G. "Return migration", Annual Review of Anthropologyf vol. 9 (1980) pp. 135-159. This is a valuable review paper which collates much of the recent work on return migration, especially that by anthropologists. Gmelch is concerned largely with international return migration. There is an initial section criticising terminological sloppiness. A basic distinction can be made between temporary and permanent return migration. Motives for return migration generally focus on strong family ties, but there are problems concerned with collecting information on this aspect. Most studies, nevertheless, find that pull factors from the home region are much more important than pushes from the immigration country in stimulating returns. The other main sections of the review are on adaptation of returnees and on their impact on home societies. There are two approaches to the question of readaptation. One examines returnees' socio-economic objectives - employment, income, housing, community organisation etc. The second looks at returnees perceptions of the home environment and of their own position within it. Reference is made to the special problems encountered by returnee women and children. The impact of return migration on home societies is examined under a number of heads: introduction of new work skills; investment of savings; innovative ideas; and social structure. A majority of the case studies quoted refer to southern Europe and the Mediterranean although work on Ireland, Puerto Rico, the West Indies and South Asia is also mentioned. The conclusion notes that most of the literature quoted is descriptive rather than comparative or analytical. Little theory has been applied to return migration. Perhaps more work needs to be done on middle and upper status returnee groups. The bibliography contains some inaccuracies. WE* NC Gmelch, G. "Who returns and why: return migration behavior in two North Atlantic societies", Human Organization vol. 42, No. 1 (Washington, Spring 1983) pp. 46-54 The author examines return migration in two populations in Ireland and Newfoundland, Canada, with a focus on the characteristics of return migrants and their reasons for returning to their homelands. The data concern 606 Irish return migrants interviewed in 1977-1978 and 420 Newfoundland return migrants interviewed in 1979. Similarities between these two groups with regard to sex, age, occupation, years spent abroad, residence and emigration intention are noted. A conceptual framework is developed in order to analyze the various push and pull factors affecting this migration. The importance of attachment to home country and of social and family ties is emphasized. [0351W] - 56 - WE Gmelch, G. "Irish return migration and migrant adjustment", paper presented at the American Anthropological Association 77th Annual Meeting, Nov. 14-18, 1978. Describes ongoing research on returning migrants to Ireland, including their demographic characteristics, motives for returning, especially related to life cycle and problems of adjustment. WE* Gmelch, G. "The readjustment of return migrants in Western Ireland", in R. King (ed.) Return migration and regional economic problems (London, Sidney, Dover, Croom Helm, 1985), pp. 152-170. This chapter examines the readjustment that Irish return migrants experience in re-settling in small communities in western Ireland. Some students of return migration have suggested that because returnees are familiar with their destination and are likely to have friends and relatives living there, the barriers to and psychic costs of returning will be lower than for individuals arriving for the first time (for a review see Bovenkerk, 1974, Gmelch, 1980). Moreover, if there is a degree of learning-by-experience associated with migration, then persons who have emigrated at least once should find it easier to move again. The Irish case described below, however, presents a very different picture. Some migrants do readjust quickly and encounter few problems; even after many years' absence they appear to pick up where they left off as though they had never been away. But many migrants are unhappy and disillusioned. While they are often economically better off than their neighbours, they are disappointed and sometimes bitter about life in their homeland. WE Gokalp, C. "L'emigration turque en Europe et particulierement en France", Population, vol. 28, No. 2 (March-April 1973), pp. 335-360 Based on official data on Turkish workers in the Federal Republic of Germany and France, the author investigates, among other aspects of migration from Turkey, the impact of the returnees on the Turkish economy. WE Goldey, P. "Migration, co-operation and development: an examination of a pilot project in Portugal", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 45-53. Evaluation of a co-operative established by 74 returnees in the village of Alvoco in 1977, with the support of a Dutch funding agency and the Portuguese Ministry of Agriculture. AS Goldstein, S. "Circulation in the context of total mobility in Southeast Asia", Papers of the East-West Population Institute. No. 53 (1978). WE Gordian, F. "Salvatore und Gennaro kehren heim: Italienische Gastarbeiter in Deutschland - Leben im Ausnahmezustand", Auslands-Kurierr vol. 11, No. 5 (October 1970), pp. 23-24. AF Gould, J.D. "Les retours" Peuples Noirs - Peuples Africains (mars-avril 1981), pp. 3-189. NC* WE Gould, J.D. "European intercontinental emigration. The road home: return migration from the USA", The Journal of European Economic History, vol.9, No. 1 (Spring 1980), pp 41-111. [0351W] - 57 A lengthy and rather unstructured study of the history of return migration from the US to Europe. The first section calculates and discusses return migration ratios for nationals for many European countries. The second section looks at Italian emigration and returns during the period 1876-1914, comparing returns from the US with those from Brazil and Argentina. The article is confusing, however, and lacks substantive critique or comment on the ratios used. The reader is left to draw his own conclusions. WE Granelli, L. "Emigrazione di ritorno", Informazioni Suimez. vol. 28, No. 5 (15 Marzo 1975), pp. 185-186. WE Granelli, L. 1680-1689. WE Grece, Ministere du Travail Les problemes des Grecsr migrants de la deuxieme generation; mesures pratiques et actions mises en place par la Grece pour leur reinsertion. ILO Tripartite Meeting on the Reintegration of Second-Generation Migrants in Cases of Voluntary Return, Belgrade, 1984, 14 p. WE Greek Government/Council of Europe Programme Report on Greecef ILO Tripartite Meeting on the Reintegration of Second-Generation Migrants in Cases of Voluntary Return, Belgrade, 1984, 19 p. WE Greece Education et enseignement de la Langue maternelle; contribution presentee par le Gouvernement Grec. ILO Tripartite Technical Seminar on Second-Generation Migrants, 2nd, Granada 1982, (ILO-RER/79/001/SEM.II/14.A), 9 p. Conference paper on educational policy and social policy of Greece regarding second-generation Greek migrant (immigrant) youth in Federal Republic of Germany and elsewhere. Covers migrant education, social integration, language teaching, vocational training and return migration. AF Gregory, J.W., Piche, V. "African return migration: past, present and future", Contemporary Marxism, No. 7 (Fall 1983), pp. 169-183. The various forms of return migration in Africa in the twentieth century are first examined, and the factors affecting them are discussed. The authors then consider the value of the household, rather than the individual, as the unit of analysis. Return migration is also analyzed in terms of the linking role it plays between Africa's capitalist and non-capitalist countries. Finally, alternative future trends in the circulatory flow of African labour are considered. WE* Gregory, D.D. and Cazorla Perez, J. "Intra-European migration and regional development: Spain and Portugal", in R. Rogers (ed.) Guests come to stay (Westview Press, 1985), pp. 231-261. Comparative analysis of return migration and development in Andalusia and the Algarve. The objective was to underline that, unless the Governments of the Mediterranean countries become more attuned to problems of political economy at the regional level, return migration and remittances will not have a positive effect on the areas of out-migration. AF* Grey-Johnson, C. "Measures to facilitate the return and reintegration of highly skilled migrants into African countries", International Migration. vol. XXIV, No. 1 (Geneva, 1986), pp. 197-212. "Emigrazione di ritorno", II Pontef vol. 30, No. 11-12, pp. - 58 - GE* Griffin, K. "On the emigration of the peasantry", World Development, vol., No. 5 (1976), pp. 353-361. This article attempts to disprove the view that emigration harms the development of the sending country. From a largely theoretical standpoint, Griffin examines the effects of emigration from rural areas, return migration and remittances, and concludes that overall the net result is beneficial for those peasant-oriented regions of outmigration. An addendum applies the same set of arguments to international migration. AS* Griffiths, S. L. "Emigration and entrepreneurship in a Philippine peasant village", Papers in Anthropology, vol. 20, No. 1 (1979), pp. 127-144. This paper looks at emigration, return migration and entrepreneurship in a rich garlic-growing village in Ilocos, north-west Luzon. Migration is mainly to Hawaii, and started in the 1920s. Griffiths maintains that wealth generated by emigration and by entrepreneurship in trading garlic has not only strengthened lateral ties amongst villagers but also, paradoxically, increased socio-economic differentiation. These two phenomena are strongly reflected in two important village institutions, the fiesta and the sociedad (a rotating credit society founded by returnees). The first phase of emigration from the village was the 62 men who went to work as cane-cutters in Hawaiian sugar estates. Of these, 31 returned, mostly before 1939. Most invested their earnings in land, which provided security at a time when landlord-tenant relationships were unstable and inclined to be exploitative of the tenant. Men bought land to establish dowries for themselves and for their children. Migrants who stayed on in Hawaii until after the war returned as "retirees". Their pensions and retirement bonuses made them very wealthy by local standards - an average pension was worth four times a local schoolteacher's salary. Special attention is given by Griffiths to retirees' marriage patterns. He suggests that retirees' kin see to it that they marry young women from other villages so that retiree wealth remains potentially accessible to them, the kin. Lastly, the more recent emigrants, mostly young men, tend not to return. This releases land for non-migrants to buy and farm. Only a small proportion of recent migrants send remittances for land and house-buying. Little emigrant wealth is channelled into the garlic trade. WE Gross, B., Stevens, W., Werth, M., eds. Akademiker aus Bntwicklungslandern in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland; Zwischen Brain-Drain und Ruckkehr (Saarbrucken, Verlag Breitenbach, 1982). GE* Grubel, H.F. "Reflections on the present state of the Brain Drain and a suggested remedy", Minerva, vol. 14, No. 2 (1976), pp. 209-224. This paper is chiefly notable for the map showing inflows and returns of scientific and technical personnel to and from North America by source country. For some countries the rates of return are very high (85% to Switzerland, 1961-69, for instance). WE Grupo de Sociologia Urbana de Lyon "El retorno al pais de origen de los trabajadores immigrados en Francia y sus familias: deseos, partidas y condiciones de exito", Boletin Informativo, No. 147 (septiembre-octubre 1980), pp. 149-150, part II ibid.. No. 148 (noviembre-diciembre 1980), pp. 2-24. [0351W] - 59 - AS Gunge, M.E. Turkey - Turkish workers' companiesr Forschungsinstitut der Friedrich-Ebert Stiftung, Arbeiten aus der Abteilung Entwicklungslanderforschung, Nr. 71 (Bonn, 1978). WE Haberl, O.N. Die Abwanderung von Arbeitskraften aus Jugoslawien. Zur Problematik ihrer Auslandsbeschaftieung und Riickfiihrung (Munich, Oldenbourg Verlag, 1978), 337 p. Problems arising in Yugoslavia after the return of labourers in social, demographic and economic fields. WE* Haberl, O.N. "Remigration versus Aufenthaltsverfestigung - Jugoslawen in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland", in H. Korner and U. Mehrlander (eds.) Die "neue" Auslanderpolitik in Europa - Erfahrungen in den Aufnahme- und Ent s end e1andern (Bonn, Forschungsinstitut der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, 1986), pp. 197-210. WE Hammar, T. "Dilemmas of Swedish immigration policy: They were invited to stay permanently. Do they want to return?", in The politics of. return. International return migration in Europer ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 187-200. Statistical examination of (i) return migration from Sweden by sex and year of immigration as from 1968 to 1977; (ii) immigration of Yugoslav citizens to Sweden from 1968 to 1978; (iii) re-emigration of Yugoslav citizens from Sweden from 1968 to 1978; (iv) return migration of Finnish citizens to Finland in 1974-77 by duration of stay in Sweden; (v) re-immigration and immigration to Sweden of Finnish citizens in 1974-77; (vi) return migration to Finland, Greece and Yugoslavia in 1977. Analysis of the Swedish immigration and return policy. NC* WE Handlin, 0. "Immigrants who go back", The Atlantic, vol. 198 (1956), pp. 70-74. A readable but highly personal account of Handlin's contacts with Greek returnees from the US. He emphasises the long history of the two-way flows between Europe and North America. Those who return, he suggests, are those who never became acculturated. Most never attempted to do so, simply coming to terms with the essentials of life in America. Most see return as a reward for their efforts and success in the US. They want to display their success when they return but are often frustrated by the attitudes of non-migrants and disillusioned by the changes that have taken place in their absence. Even so, they are still disturbed by the lack of basic facilities such as health care and wish to improve things in their home areas. He cites societies set up by returnees to improve and construct roads, hospitals, churches, olive oil presses, water works etc. WE Haniotis, G.V. "An exercise in voluntary repatriation in Greece", The OECD Observer, 11 (1964), pp. 12-15. In 1961 24 % of all Greeks in higher education were studying abroad, 59 % of them studying scientific and technical subjects. Many remain abroad, tempted by higher salaries, better working conditions and brighter opportunities for advancement. The OECD Directorate of Scientific Affairs is co-operating with the Greek government in setting up a pilot repatriation scheme, designed to encourage a limited number of Greek scientists working abroad to return under a two-year contract to participate in Greece's development effort. [0351W] - 60 - WE Harder, E. Riickkehr oder Verbleib. Eine Befragung griechischer Arbeiter in Nordrhein-Westfalen (Melle, 1980). WE Hardman, A., and Power, J. Western Europe's migrant workersf Minority Rights Group Report no. 28 (London, 1976). WE Harrison, G. Viavai Calabresi. L'emigrazione di ritorno rivisitata in chiave antropologica (Cosenza, Quaderni del Dipartimento di Scienze dell'Educazione no. 35), 140 p. WE* 't Hart, M. "Irish return migration in the nineteenth century", Tiidschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie/Journal of Economic and Social Geography, Vol. 76, No. 3 (Amsterdam, 1985), pp. 223-231. This study is concerned with return migration to Ireland from the United States during the nineteenth century. The author first notes that the rate of return migration was relatively low. Reasons for returning are then considered, including inheritance and poor health. Data on 671 Irish returnees from passenger lists of ships arriving in the United Kingdom from the United States between 1858 and 1867 are analysed with regard to sex, marital status, age, oppupations and impact of returnees. WE Harvey, S. Dutch return migration. North Brabant farmers' sons. study of settler loss (Melbourne, La Trobe University, 1980). WE Heikkinen, S.L. "Return migration from Sweden to Finland", Proceedings of the Nordic Seminar on long-term effects of migration, Taljoviken, May 27-29, 1974. GE* Hekmati, M. "Non-returning foreign students: why do they not return home?", Die Dritte Welt, vol. 2, No. 1 (1972), pp. 25-43. Six hypotheses are postulated and tested using the responses of 210 foreign students in New York. Sub-samples were constructed using respondents of five nationalities: Greece, India, Iran, the Philippines and Turkey. The six hypotheses are: (i) non-returning students experience a high degree of anomie - defined as an individual's perception of his society and of his place in it; (ii) non-returnees experience high normlessness - the expectancy of the necessity of defiant behaviour to attain economic and political goals; (iii) non-returnees experience high powerlessness - low expectancy of controls over political and economic goals; (iv) returnees are of higher social status than non-returnees; (v) returnees have stronger family ties; (vi) non-returnees are more favourably inclined towards life and society in America. The survey findings lead to the rejection of hypotheses (i) and (vi) and to the acceptance to the rest. When the sample is broken down by nationality there is little change from the overall findings. The novelty of this article is the attempt it makes to measure attitudes and values and the way they bear on return migration of students studying overseas. Many do not wish to go home but most do, motivated by desires to contribute to development. AS Helm, P., ed. Entwicklungspolitische Forderung der Riickgliederung tiirkischer Arbeitnehmer in die Volkswirtschaft ihrer Heimat (Munchen, WIP, 1971), 102 p. A case - 61 - AS Helweg, A.W. "Emigration and return: ramifications for India", Population Review, Vol. 28, No. 1-2 (Jan.-Dec. 1984), pp. 45-57. This article provides a sketch of the influences emigration has on India in general and on her local communities in particular. After giving a brief historical synopsis, it deals with the present situation and focuses on general topics such as the effects on the Indian economy, society and culture, and the situation of expatriates returning to their homeland. AF Herbeth, A. "Utilises et rejetes: les immigres", L'Echo de Notre Tempsf 150 (novembre 1979), pp. 35-46. WE Hermanns, H., Lienau, C. "Ruckwanderung griechischer Gastarbeiter und Entwicklung landlicher Raume in Griechenland", in P. Weber, ed. Periphere Raume (Paderborn, 1979) pp. 53-86. WE Hermet, G. "Voluntad de retorno de los emigrantes cualificados. Encuesta en una empresa de Bilbao", Fomento Social, Vol. 21, No. 84 (octubre-diciembre 1964), pp. 351-365. WE Hermet, G. "Les retours d'emigrants qualifies: Enquete dans une usine de Bilbao", Mobilite de la main-d'oeuvre et developpement economique. Etudes sur quatre pays du Bassin Mediterranean (Paris, Fondation Nationale des Sciences Politiques, 1967), pp. 25-40. LA Hernandez-Alvarez, J. "A demographic profile of the Mexican immigration to the United States, 1910-1950", Journal of Inter American Studies, Vol. 8, No. 3 (1966), pp. 472-496. NC* Hernandez-Alvarez, J. Return migration to Puerto Rico (University of California, Berkeley, 1967), 153 p. This is a most important text on return migration in the Americas. The study is based on two data sources, the 1960 census and an interview survey of 307 Puerto Rican returnees carried out in 1963-4. The interviewees were identified from the census cards on 34,052 returned Puerto Ricans. The information in the book is presented under 5 headings. First is geographic mobility: 90% of returnees were from rural areas but 84% return to urban areas, with 40% going to the capital San Juan. However, there is evidence to suggest that a move to town had taken place prior to emigration. Returnees tend to be middle-aged family-based individuals, although there is a small but significant group of elderly coming back to retire. The second heading is resettlement in Puerto Rico. Returnees have fewer children per married woman than non-migrants - 2.74 compared to 3.85. There is an excess of females in the return migration stream, partly made up of separated and divorced women although some single unmarried women return. A table gives a breakdown of economic characteristics which highlights the importance of professionals and skilled people amongst the returnees. Return migrants are different in many respects from the native population and this poses problems for their reintegration. Thirdly, family structure is examined. The age structure is dominated by partial families in the 25-44 age range; there are not many young children. Return migrants' children experienced unemployment problems; they look unsuccessfully for good jobs and 29 % are unemployed. Fourthly, fertility. A detailed discussion is given on the likely impact of return migration on the future demographic - 62 - development of Puerto Rico. Although returnees exhibit a low fertility, many are in the 35-45 age cohort which is notorious in Puerto Rico for its high (second peak) fertility. The fertility behaviour of this group of returnees is awaited: birth control advice could prove crucial. The final heading concerns economic aspects of return migration. Half the interview sample said that they returned home because of lack of work in the US. The return group are, however, an advantaged group in Puerto Rican terms, with better education, more skills, savings etc. Quite a high proportion are professionals, managers and service and white collar workers; only 6 % are in agriculture. Some 29 % of returnees work in manufacturing industry, following the kind of job done in the US. Half the returnees experienced some unemployment or partial unemployment upon return. It is not clear how beneficial the US experience has been in terms of job acquisition. The return of such large numbers of Puerto Rican migrants does pose a threat to the Puerto Rican economy at a time of difficulty. The book ends with a summary and case studies which highlight many of the points made. There are many excellent tables. Essential reading for any student of return migration. Hernandez-Alvarez, J. "Migration, Return and Development in Puerto Rico", Economic Development and Cultural Changef vol. 16, No. 4 (1968), pp. 574-587. This paper is based on the author's monograph on return migration to Puerto Rico. After outlining the data sources and the reasons for the initial exodus from Puerto Rico (poor employment opportunities), Hernandez Alvarez suggests that return flows were due to declining employment opportunities in the United States. The return migrants have better jobs, more skill, are better educated and are more likely to live in towns than those who never emigrated. Returns of the magnitude presently being experienced will give rise to real problems of absorption in Puerto Rico. Unemployment and part employment rates are already high, and an increasing number of returnees are having to draw on assistance from welfare agencies. The flow of migrants has to be carefully monitored so that appropriate policy decisions can be taken. Hernandez-Alvarez, J. "Migration, return and development", development and Cultural Change (1968), pp. 574-588. Economic Hernandez Cruz, J.E. "Reintegration of circulating families in Southwestern Puerto Rico", International Migrationf vol. XXIV, No. 2 (1986), pp. 397-409. This study explores the circulatory movements of Puerto Rican families, events which influence the adaptation process when returning to Puerto Rico and cultural identity aspects. The dissatisfaction and problems expressed by the interviewees should be seen within the framework of the socio-economic characteristics of the region. This is a region with an average of 28.42 per cent unemployment rate, but fluctuates between 34.2 and 19.3 per cent. Even with a job, these families will receive an average weekly salary of $ 106 to $ 286, which hardly provides for the basic needs of an average family of seven. It is most likely, as revealed by the data, that these families will have serious difficulties finding economic stability and would possibly consider migrating once again as an alternative to their social reality. Nevertheless, it should be taken into consideration that these migrants are returning to suburban areas where they have built their homes on property owned by their families, where the rent is minimal or non at all. But, the construction of the home could have used all of their earnings, and not finding a job that would bring economic stability can develop serious conflicts. - 63 - Heyden, H. "Ruckkehrforderung und Auslanderpolitik", Auslanderrecht und Auslanderpolitik, 1 (1984), pp. 5-9. Zeitschrift fiir Hinds, D. Journey to an Illusion: the West Indian in Britain. (London, Heinemann, 1966), 209 p. This documentary study, written by a Jamaican, is partly anecdotal but is nevertheless full of powerful insights into migration, including return. A special section of the book, entitled "The two-way dream", looks at attitudes towards return and at the experiences of some who have gone back, particularly Jamaicans. Experiences are varied, but there is the clear danger that the return is just as much an illusion as the original move from the Caribbean to Britain. Many second generation have strong desires to return, but these are partly fed by their negative experiences in Britain. Many ambitions to return and plans for a new life back home are unrealistic. In Jamaica returnees are considered almost as a separate class and initially as tourists. Hodgkin, M.C. The Innovators: the Role of Foreign-Trained Persons in Southeast Asia (Sydney, Sydney University Press, 1972), 118 p. In 1971 there were 10,700 overseas students in Australia, 10% of full-time enrolments in Australian universities. This study, based on fieldwork in Malaysia and Singapore in 1960-61 and 1968-69, looks at the adjustment and employment patterns of returnees from Australian universities. It is a study which attempts to examine whether returnee graduates are innovators and whether the money backing them in their studies abroad has been well spent. These are very difficult questions and it is difficult to find clear answers to them in this book. 447 returnees were located by a snowball sample and interviewed; 163 were also sampled for in-depth interviews. 74% of the sample were Chinese, 14% Malay and 12% Indian or other. The mean period abroad was 5-6 years; 45% were aged 28-30 years in 1968. They represented a wide variety of professions, but there were contrasts between the three main groups. Chinese mostly return to urban, commercial jobs, Malays return more to government and managerial positions, some of them in rural areas. Returned Indians are in a somewhat different position. They tend to come from less wealthy backgrounds and few have business interests on the scale of the Chinese. Some Indians hold government positions. Generally they stand as middlemen in the tensions between Malays and Chinese. Hodgkin concludes that it is unrealistic to expect, without considering political, cultural and economic aspects, that overseas training will automatically produce effective innovators who will have the opportunity and the incentive to put into practice the skills and ideas picked up abroad. There are barriers to innovation in terms of race and the range of social contacts. For instance, a Chinese agronomist would have the greatest difficulty in introducing agriculture changes to Malay farmers, even if he did speak Malay. Because the returnees were still young, many found that their role as authority figures was not accepted by village elders. Others found it difficult to get equipment to do their job properly. Returnees complained on return of the frustration of the old way of life; they were expected to behave in certain ways, befitting their new status. There were status divisions between returnees from British and Australian universities, the former carrying more prestige. Social links formed whilst studying abroad are important in making progress in business. Formal associations of alumni existed; membership - 64 - of these was highest among Chinese. About two-thirds found jobs relevant to their Australian training; some were passing it on directly, as teachers and instructors. Architects, engineers and accountants also used their training directly. Agronomists, doctors, nurses and economists found that their training was often not relevant to the local conditions (different crops, different diseases etc.). Some returnees, frustrated by the slow pace of change, were thinking of re-emigrating. Few of those potentially in a position to effect rural change had a pre-migration rural background themselves. Returnees became members of a "third culture", positioned as cultural middlemen between Western and indigenous society. There are wide variations in returnees' ability to act as cultural bridges. Nevertheless one is able to identify a group of returnees who are committed to progress without sacrificing important traditional cultural values. This is a crucial group for the future. WE* Hollingsworth, T.H. Migration; A study based on Scottish experience between 1939 and 1964r University of Glasgow, Social and Economic Studies Occasional Paper No. 12 (Edinburgh, Oliver and Boyd, 1970), 187 p. Return migration is only one of many aspects of Scottish migration explored in this text. Early chapters look at the importance of migration in the Scottish context, at migration data and at internal migration. In Chapter 4, on Health Service Register Data, it is estimated that 50% of second moves by internal migrants were returns. Return migration receives more attention in the chapters on external migration. As with internal migration, the poor quality of data on returns is stressed. However, a large proportion of • immigrants• from abroad is in fact return migrants. Returns are less likely the longer an individual is away. Returns are highest to the main cities, lowest to the northern counties. Little about the character of the return movement is said. AF Holt, D. ff. WE* Holzman, J.M. The Nabobs in England. Indian 1760-1785 (New York, 1926). WE Hommes et Migration "Formation des travailleurs immigres en vue du retour au pays", Hommes et Migrations, 28 (1977). Abstracts of the seminar organized by the Centre de Recherche et d'Etude pour la Diffusion du Francais (Paris, 12-14 jan. 1976) concerning the promotion of a vocational training system for migrants wishing to return. WE Honekopp, E. "Labour market development, tendencies of return migration, the individual motives for the return and the plans for the period after the return", Conferencia sobre retorno e reintegracao dos emigrantes (Lisboa, Instituto de Estudos para o Desenvolvimento, June 1984), 5 p. The document presents 4 statistical indicators in the Federal Republic of Germany: 1) Labour force, employment and registered unemployment from 1970-1984; 2) Inflows and outflows of the total foreign population (1960-1983); 3) Inflows and outflows of employed foreigners (1964-1982); and 4) Inflows and outflows of the foreign population by age groups (1974-1982). AF* Houghton, D.H. "Men of two worlds: some aspects of migratory labour in South Africa", South African Journal of Economicsr vol. 28, No. 4 (1960), pp. 177-190. [0351W] "The send them back campaign", Race today (Aug. 1971), pp. 256 A study of the returned Anglo- - 65 - AS* Huguet, J.W. "The return of international labour migrants in the ESCAP region", International Migration, vol. XXIV, No. 1 (1985), pp 129-146. GE ICM Cultural identity of voune migrants and re-integration services rendered to migrants returning to their country of origin. ILO Tripartite technical seminar on second-generation migrants, Granada, 1982 (Geneva, 1982, ILO-RER/79/001/Sem.II/9), 6 p. Conference paper on the role of ICM in preserving the ethnic culture of immigrant youth and facilitating social integration after return migration. Discusses information dissemination, language teaching, vocational training, promotion of cultural relations with emigration home countries, assistance in migration policy making, etc, and stresses the promotion of migrant associations for social participation and coordination between home and host countries. WE IED, Instituto de Estudos para o Desenvolvimento Research Project on the Return of Portuguese Emigrants: Regional Impact and Application of Their Savings (Lisbon, mimeographed, 1982). GE ILO Problems raised by the return of migrant workersf Meeting of Experts on Migrant Workers, Geneva, 1975 (ILO RETM/75/D.2). Conference paper on migration policy and problems in respect of return migration of migrant workers and their families to the country of origin. Discusses international labour standards. AS ILO-ARTEP Impact of return migration on domestic employment in Pakistan - A preliminary analysis (ILO Asian Employment Programme, April 1984), 113 p. WE Immigration Advisory Council, Department of Immigration, Commonwealth of Australia The departure of settlers from Australia (Canberra, 1967). WE Institut fur Entwicklungsforschung und Sozialplanung (ISOPLAN) Tiirkische Arbeitnehmergesellschaften, Band II (Bonn, ISOPLAN, 1975), 147 p. WE Institut Fernando Santi Communication a la reunion tripartite sur la reinsertion des migrants de la deuxieme generation en cas de retour volontaire, Belgrade, 1984 (Geneve, BIT, 1984), 10 p. WE Instituto Espaiiol de Emigracion Guia del emigrante que retorna (Madrid, 1983), 60 p. Guide book for returning migrants in Spain as concerns work, social security, education and financial assistance and facilities. WE* Instituto Espaiiol de Emigracion Guia de cooperativismo para emigrantes (Madrid, I.E.E., 1984), 77 p. This booklet is a compilation of all existing legislative material and practical information for the establishment of cooperatives. It was specially designed for returning migrants. WE* Instituto Espaiiol de Emigracion Informe sobre incidencia de la emigracion. los perfiles v reacciones de los emigrantes, en una muestra nacional de la poblacion espanola en 1985 (Madrid, I.E.E., 1985) Results from a national survey carried out in 1985 concerned with various aspects of Spanish migration. Some 390 returned migrants were identified and interviewed on the duration and their rating of the migration [0351W] - 66 - experience, the problems faced upon return, the acquisition of professional qualifications, their present employment, their change of residence and present incomes. WE* Instituto EsparLol de Emigracion Informe sobre retorno en forma de cooperativas (Madrid, I.E.E., 1985), 15 p. Presents three cooperatives recently established in Spain by returned migrants and describes Spain's programmes in this field. AS ISOPLAN Turkische Arbeitnehmergesellschaf t. Betriebsgriindungen in der Tiirkei (ISOPLAN, 1975). WE* Istituto Fernando Santi Ipotesi di reinserimento produttivo a favore di lavoratori rientrati nelle Region! Calabria, Campania, Sardegna e Veneto (Rome, 1983), 350 p. Labour surveys and sectoral analysis were conducted in the four regions in relation to the productive reinsertion of returning migrants. Viable economic activities were identified in each sector with respect to professional training, organisational and managerial needs. WE* Istituto Fernando Santi Ipotesi di reinserimento produttivo degll emigrati nelle Region! Sardegna e Calabria (Rome, 1982), 214 p. Sectoral analysis in selected communities of Sardinia and Clabria concerned with the productive reintegration of returning migrants. Includes a survey of a sample of returnees which extends to various economic aspects of their migration history. WE* Istituto Fernando Santi Rlcerca sui programmi di ricostruzione e sul reinserimento produttivo deeli emigrati nelle zone Campania e Puglia colpite dal sisma del Novembre 1980 (Rome, 1982), 322 p. Identifies viable economic activities for returning migrants in Campania and Puglia, in relation to the consequences of the 1980 earthquake. WE* Istituto Fernando Santi Andamento dell'emigrazione calabrese in rapporto all evoluzione economica della regione (Rome, 1983), 121 p. Discusses some development issues of the Calabria region in the light of migratory movements. Includes statistical information on labour demand, existing enterprises and cooperatives, emigration/repatriation flow, population growth, etc. WE* ISVI-FORMEZ II reinserimento produttivo in forma cooperatlva degli emigrati di retorno. II caratteristiche della zona di esodo e dell'emigrazione; II; Studio di fattibilita di tre ipotesi di cooperative (Catania, 1980). Sectoral analysis and feasibility studies concerning the creation of cooperatives by returning migrants in Sicily. Includes a survey of migrant workers in Switzerland and the Federal Republic of Germany and of returned migrants in Calatino (Sicily) related to their reintegration prospects, use of remittances, etc. WE International Catholic Migration Commission "Three research studies on Italian returnee migrants", Migration News, vol. 18, no. 2 (March-April 1969), pp. 1-22. AS Iqbal, M., Khan, M.F. Economic Implications of the return flow of immigrants from the Middle East; A preliminary study (Islamabad, Pakistan Institute of Development Economics, 1981), 27 p. [0351W] Evaluierung von - 67 Report on the incidence and rate of return migration of migrant workers from the Middle East to Pakistan. Examines the geographic distribution of Pakistani emigrants in Arab countries by occupational structure; discusses anticipated occupations of return migrants, issues relating to employment opportunities, low wages and the maintenance of standard of living; includes migration policy suggestions. WE Instituto di formazione e ricerca sui problem! social! e dello suiluppo (ISVI) Emigrazione di ritorno e professionalita; una indagine sulla Sicilia centrale (Catania, ISVI, 1979). WE Jackson, J.A. 1963.) WE Jackson, J.A. "Ireland", in Emigrant workers returning to their home country. Supplement (Paris, OECD, 1967), pp. 101-111. NC* Jackson, P. "Social and spatial aspects of Puerto Rican migration", Singapore Journal of Tropical Geographyf vol. 1, No. 1 (1980), pp 37-45. Research on Puerto Rican migration has tended to ignore the impact of migration on the island. Recent population change is increasingly associated with the impact of return migration. Population and migration dynamics are explored cartographically and by correlation and linkage analyses, using data for 1940-70. Many emigrants from rural areas return to urban areas after a spell in the US. Recent returned migrants appear to include more females and young persons, suggesting that return migration is increasingly a family phenomenon. WE Jelden, H. " Ruckkehrhilfen fur Gastarbeiter", in W. Althammer, ed. Gastarbeiterproblem (Miinchen, 1975), pp. 62-74. WE* Jenny, R.K. "Riickkehrhilfe und Weiterwanderung", Fliichtlinge in Europa. Arbeitstagung der Otto Benecke Stiftung, 20-21 November 1983 (Baden-Baden, Nomos Verlag, 1984), pp. 161-166. AF* WE Jerrome, D. "Migrants or settlers? The Ibo in London", Africa, vol. 48, No. 4 (1978), pp. 368-379. There were 3,000 Ibo in London in the mid seventies; 60% were males and most were aged 25-40, having been in London for 5-10 years. The majority came to gain qualifications in order to improve their status upon return home, but the Biafra war interrupted this expectation and blocked their return. Jerrome views the Ibo in London not as immigrants but as a migrant community. Their declared intention is still to return. Rates of return are higher for the elite. Others are 'perpetual students' and are in a dilemma over their future. Families in which the wage earner is engaged in white-collar or semi-skilled employment are least liable to return. Many of these men have abandoned their studies or continue them only on a desultory part-time basis; they are caught in a vicious circle of failure which makes the return home an often unattainable dream. NC Johnson, R.A. "The Newyorican comes home to Puerto Rico: Description and consequences", in Return Migration and Remittances: Developing a Caribbean perspectiveP ed. by W.F. Stinner, K. de Albuquerque and R.S. Bryce-Laporte, RUES occasional papers No. 3 (Washington 1982), pp. 129-156. [0351W] The Irish in Britain (Routledge and Kegan Paul, London, Das - 68 - This paper focusses on both out-migration and back-migration of Puerto Ricans to and from the United States. Reasons for leaving Puerto Rico and for returning, and consequences of both moves. AS Jurecka, P., Werth, M. Mobilitat und Reintegration. Analyse der wirtschaftlichenr sozialen und entwicklungspolitischen Effekte der Migration von auslandischen Arbeitnehmernf untersucht am Beispiel der Ruckwanderung in die Tiirkei (Saarbriicken, ISOPLAN, 1980). WE* Kaiser, M., Migration und Remieration - das (Stuttgart, Verlag W. Kohlhammer, 1985), 14 p. WE* Kaiser, M. "Migration und Remigration - das Beispiel Griechenland", Mitteilungen aus der Arbeitsmarkt- und Berufsforschung (Stuttgart, Berlin, Kbln, Mainz, 1985), pp. 492-506. Since 1982 the Greek emigration policy has encouraged both emigration and return. This article explains the basic measures and contours of Greek return migration policy. WE Kallweit, H., Kudat, A. Ruckwanderung auslandischer Arbeiter: zwangweise oder freiwillig (Berlin, Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin, 1976.) WE Kammerer, P. "Reintegrationsprobleme von Ruckwanderern in Monopoli (Apulien)", in H. Kbrner, M. Werth, eds. Ruckwanderung und Reintegration von auslandischen Arbeitnehmern in Europa (Saarbrucken/Fort Lauderdale, 1981), pp. 49-62. WE* Kamozawa, I. "Turkish immigrant coal miners in the Ruhr District, West Germany", Studies in Socio-Cultural Aspects of the Mediterranean Landsf (Tokyo, Hitosubashi University Research Group for the Mediterranean, 1979) pp. 109-143. This paper reports the results of a questionnaire survey administered in November 1974 to 334 Turkish miners in Dortmund District. Although the questionnaire covered the complete migration cycle of the respondents, some questions were concerned with return migration and there is considerable discussion on this aspect. The author received 272 answers to a question about expected date of return to Turkey. Whilst most did not intend to return for another five or six years, only two intended to reside permanently in the Federal Republic of Germany. The lack of migrants with an intention to return immediately is a reflection of their pessimistic perception of job opportunities in Turkey. Of the answers concerning real estate and other property purchased in Turkey since emigrating, new houses account for 46%, farmland for 23%, urban land for 15%, flats (for occupation or rent) for 10% and tractors for 6%. In general, the savings of migrants do not seem to be directed to encouraging productive industries in any way. Desired work on return elicited the following responses (out of 590; multiple responses were allowed): self-employed 15%, tradesman 13%, landlord 13%, factory manager 13%, industrial worker 11%, farmer 11%, shopkeeper 11%, taxi-driver 7%, lorry driver 6%. AF Karger, H.J. "Reintegrationsprobleme afrikanischer Aus- und Fortbildungsgaste der Bundesrepublik beim Einsatz in ihren Heimatlandern", Afrika Spectrum, No. 2 (1973), pp. 172-189. [0351W] Beispiel Griechenland - 69 - GE Kassimati, K. Recent studies and research on return migration: lessons to be drawn for the reintegration of voung migrants (Geneva, ILO, 1983), UNDP/ILO European Regional Project for Second Generation Migrants, working paper No. 8, 31 p. Contemporary trends of research into repatriation of second-generation migrants. Typologies of returnees, socio-economic reintegration and vocational training of second-generation migrants. Includes general proposals formulated by the international organisations to improve the different aspects of return migration. GE Kassimati, K. Etudes et recherches recentes sur le retour: Leyons en vue des politiques de (re)integration professionnellef sociale et culturelle des migrants de la deuxieme generation, en cas de retour, ILO Tripartite Technical Seminar on Second-Generation Migrants, Granada, 1982 (Geneve, 1982, 49, IL0-RER/79/001/SEM.II/3), 8 p. Conference paper comprising a literature survey of research concerning language teaching, vocational training and social integration policies in relation to return migration of second-generation migrants (immigrant/youth). Considers the role of migrant education, training and cultural factors from vantage points of both the recipient country and the country of origin. LA Kashiwazaki, H. and Suzuki, T. "Emigration and remigration of Okinawans settled in the lowlands of eastern Bolivia in relation to background characteristics of their place of origin", Journal of Human Ergologyf vol. 6, No. 1 (Sept. 1977), pp. 3-14 WE Katunaric, V. Vanlske migracile i promiene u porodici (Zagreb, 1978), 124 p. Social research study of the sociological aspects of emigration alternated with return migration (incl. internal migration), on the family structure in Yugoslavia, with particular reference to the impact thereof on emigrant parent's children. Includes theoretical concepts, and surveys the learning success and failure, behaviour and adaptability of children left behind in a one-parent family. WE Kayser, B. "Situation sur les marches du travail des emigres rentres de l'etranger", Hommes et Migrationsf 712 (octobre 1967), pp. 1-9. WE Kayser, B. "The situation of the returning migrant on the labour market in Greece: results of surveys", in Emigrant workers returning to their home countryf Supplement (Paris, OECD, 1967), pp. 169-176. WE Kayser, B. Manpower movements and labour markets WE* Kayser, B. Cyclically-determined homeward flows of migrant workers (Paris, OCDE, 1972), 58 p. This monograph synthesises a series of reports on the return migration of southern Europeans occasioned by the 1967 recession in the Federal Republic of Germany and, less so, in France. It contains data on homeward migrants in Yugoslavia, Portugal, Spain, Italy, Greece and Turkey. The basic conclusion reached is that the increased return flows caused by the slump in the Federal Republic of Germany were not massive permanent repatriations but rather took the form of extended holidays, with reemigration following a few months or years later. Some interesting data (Paris, OECD, 1971). - 70 - are presented on post-return migrant behaviour. A 1970 Greek survey based on 63 urban employment centres showed that on average only 10% of returned migrants accepted industrial employment. Most refused factory work, preferring an independent trade or even farming. In Croatia in 1970 the employment services reserved over 12,000 jobs for returnees in the firms of the socialised sector. Only 3% of the jobs were taken, low wages being the main reason for refusal. Emigrant Turkish workers in the Federal Republic of Germany are extremely mistrustful of the labour market in their country of origin. They do not believe they could find jobs fitting their new pretensions; they do no longer identify with the Turkish wage-earning class. Only in Spain and Italy - the more developed of the group of sending countries considered here - do emigrants aspire in large numbers to factory jobs. Material is also presented on the use of capital brought back. In Yugoslavia 50% is used for housebuilding, representing a rare example of allowed investment in durable goods. Much returnee housing is excessively large and departs from traditional styles and settlement clusters. In Portugal too possession of a house is regarded as the best investment and the top status-symbol. Now the 'casa do Frances' replaces the 'casa do Brasilero' of an earlier era in the vulgarisation of rural architecture: the 'petit bourgeois' suburban style houses mushrooming in the Portuguese countryside are visibly modelled on those constructed by the same migrant workers in France. At the urban level, the major investment is the purchase of apartments for renting out. WE Kayser, B. Les retours conionctuels de travailleurs migrants effets de 1'emigration (OCDE, Paris, 1973). WE AF AS Kayser, B. "Migrations et Developpement", Tiers-MondeP Vol. 18 No. 69 (Jan-Mar 1977), pp. 3-175. Compilation of articles showing that emigration and return migration do not diminish the problems of underdevelopment in developing countries, but on the contrary, tend to exacerbate them. Examines the consequences of emigration policies in countries such as Portugal, Yugoslavia, Mexico and Cyprus and the problems of migrant workers in South Africa, the Gulf States (particularly Kuwait), Argentina, Western Europe. WE* Kayser, B. "European migrations: the new pattern", International Migration Reviewr vol. 11, No. 2 (1977), pp. 232-240. In Europe the age of uncontrolled migration is over. The flows are drying up and the stocks are consolidating. The recession since 1974 has not yet given rise to really massive return flows, although rates of return to Italy, Spain and Greece are higher than to Portugal and Turkey. Data on this are tabulated. AS* Keats, D. Back in Asia (Canberra, 1969, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australia National University, 1969) 216 p. This study of trainees educated in Australia under the Colombo Plan is designed to assess the effectiveness of this form of educational aid to the developing countries of southeast Asia. It was based on a questionnaire sent to more than 500 returnees in many southeast Asian countries and on structured interviews to nearly 200 returnees in person. On the whole the training programmes had been fairly successful. Keats found that the lack of recognition of some Australian qualifications produced difficulties and she recommended that more students should be admitted for post-graduate degree work in areas in which Australian courses and conditions are more suitable for Asian needs than are European or North American programmes. The shortage of technical [0351W] et les - 71 - assistants is great. Australia could do more in this field of tcraining. More attempts should be made to foster continuing professional contacts for returnees through journals, associations and return visits to Australia. GE* Keely, C.B. "Return of talent programs: rationale and evaluation criteria for programs to ameliorate a 'brain drain'", International Migrationr vol. XXIV, No. 1 (Geneva, 1986), pp 179-190. WE* £eenan, J.G. "Irish migration: all or nothing resolved?", The Economic and Social Review, vol. 12, No. 3 (1981), pp. 169-181. Irish net migration has changed dramatically. In 1951-61 it was -408,800, in 1961-71 -134,500 and in 1971-79 +106,800. Various ways of modelling net migration to take account of this trend to net return are reviewed and difficulties highlighted with regard to variable prediction. It is concluded that an exogenous estimator of migration flows gives better prediction at the moment than the currently used models which endogenise net migration. WE* Keles, R. "Investment by Turkish migrants in real estate", in Turkish workers in Europe 1960-1975: A socio-economic reappraisal ed. by Nermin Abadan Unat (Leiden, Brill, Social, Economic and Political Studies of the Middle East, 1976), pp. 169-178. Turkish migrants' remittances increased from $ 500,000 in 1965 to $ 2,000 million in 1972. The share of workers' remittances in the total of foreign currency earned through exports increased from 15% in 1965 to 84% in 1973. It is widely accepted that this source of cash is not used satisfactorily in the Turkish development process. The tendency for speculative investment in real estate rather than in productive industry is clear. A postal questionnaire sent to 76 selected Turkish workers in Hamburg elicited a small amount of empirical data on this issue. 55% had bought flats in Turkey, for which a period of residence abroad of 5-6 years can be imputed. Most of the flats are in large cities, especially Istanbul. Many flats are luxurious and beyond the standards required by their owners, who may not necessarily plan to live in them themselves. Only state control over the private supply of such flats could alter these patterns of migrant and returnee investments. WE* Kenny, M. "The return of the Spanish emigrant", Nord Nytt. vol. 2 (1972), pp. 119-129. This paper looks in qualitative terms at the role and effectiveness as agents of change of permanent returnees from abroad. Because their numbers were small in the past their potential worth has gone unheeded. Two types of Spanish return migrants are talked about: the Indianos, the long-stay migrants to Mexico and South America who returned, often loaded with riches, to Galicia and Asturias; and the more recent shorter-stay migrants returning from Europe. Special attention is given to remittances and to the expected role of returnees as benefactors of the local community. Returnees suffer an identity crisis: when abroad they identify with Spain; when in Spain they feel themselves to be almost Mexican, German, French, etc. Returnees who have not kept in touch with home when they were abroad have a frozen memory of home so that when they return a cultural chasm has developed between them and their natal communities. Kenny believes that the most powerful motive for migration remains the desire to make good, return and reap the praise of family and community. But the great variety of background of returnees makes classification very difficult. [0351W] - 72 - WE Kenny, M. "El retorno del emigrante espanol", Boletin Informatlvof 109 (julio 1977), pp. 2-16. WE* Kenny, M. "Twentieth century Spanish expatriate ties with the homeland: remigration and its consequences", in The changing faces of rural Spain, ed. by J.B. Aceves and W.A. Douglas (New York, Schenkman, 1976), pp. 97-112. Spanish emigrants to Mexico find themselves in a cultural dilemma, an identity paradox. When the emigrant is in Mexico he identifies with Spain but when back in Spain he feels himself to be almost Mexican. Returnees soon get nostalgic for Mexico. Even after 10 years the problems of personal readjustment are great. Returnees are bored by the surfeit of enforced leisure after a lifetime of hard work. Their memory is selective; the village is remembered for what it was, not what it is. The returnee is outraged if the place has changed but also frustrated if it is the same. Wages are low so that it is hardly worth working. Business ventures are hindred by small profit margins, antiquated business methods and the intrusion of class consciousness into strictly economic affairs. As yet there is no Spanish governmental policy dealing exclusively with the reintegration of any type of migrant who returns to Spain. Church and state organisations are, however, trying to correct the image of the migrant, to stop the jokes about him and to understand his peculiar problems. AF Kessal, M. "La reinsertion: un acte volontaire", in L'emigration maghrebine en Europe. Exploitation ou cooperation? (Alger, CREA, n.d.) pp. 470-485. WE* Keyman, S. "Situation und Reaktionen von Riickkehrern in der Tiirkei", in H. Korner and U. Mehrlander (eds) Die "neue" Auslanderpolitik in Europa Erfahrungen in den Aufnahme- und Entsendelandern (Bonn, Forschungsinstitut der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, 1986), pp. 231-242. AF Khandriche, M. Developpement et reinsertion: l'exemple de 1'emigration algerienne (Paris, Publisud, 1982), 470 p. Analysis of the Algerian reintegration policy in relation to national economic development. WE* Kilzer, F. and Papathemelis, S. Remigration and reintegration of Greek guestworkers (Remigration und Reintegration griechischer Gastarbeiter)r IBS-Materialien, No. 14 (Bielefeld, Institut fur Bevolkerungsforschung und Sozialpolitik, 1984), 214 p. Return migration from the Federal Republic of Germany to Greece is analysed using data from a 1980 survey carried out in Greece among a sample of 626 return migrants. The theoretical framework of the study is first outlined, and the process of Greek labour force migration is reviewed in its economic context. Consideration is then given to the integration of migrants in the Federal Republic of Germany, motives for return migration, the economic effects of return migration, and the reintegration problems of return migrants. WE* Kindleberger, C.P. "Emigration and economic growth", Banca Nazionale del Lavoro Quarterly Review, No. 75 (1965), pp. 235-254. [0351W] - 73 - A review of the economic debate on whether emigration helps or harms the sending country's development, with particular reference to the Greek case. On the one side are Myrdal, Gini, Schultz and the early Italian literature which stresses that emigration involves the export of capital, inappropriate for poor countries. On the other side are Lewis, Nurkse, Ranis, Fei and Lutz who emphasise the benefits of emigration getting unemployed to work. The debate is presented under a number of heads: remittances sent back and brought home by returning migrants; decline in consumption by emigrants removing themselves from the economy; loss of production foregone by the emigrants' departure and non-return of the most skilled elements; training of unskilled migrants who become skilled on return. Kindleberger spends some time discussing the "return of skill" issue but, apart from returning Greek doctors and professionals, comes to no firm conclusion. When conditions are right, as they were in Europe between 1959 and 1964, large scale migration can contribute to rapid growth in both sending and receiving countries, but it is unclear how far these benefits can go. Kindleberger judges that Lewis et al have the better of the argument over Myrdal et al. This paper is also printed in an amended form in Kindleberger's book Europe's Postwar Growth (see next abstract). » » » WE* Kindleberger, C.P. Europe's Postwar Growth: The role of labour supplyf (London, Oxford University Press, 1967), 270 p. Few studies have been made of the role of labour and emigration in economic growth. This book is based on the Lewis model of growth with unlimited supplies of labour, and its relevance for Europe's postwar industrial boom. Parts of the book examine the impact on southern sending countries, especially ch. 5 which is based on the paper abstracted above. The issue of return is dealt with largely as a mechanism for transferring industrial skills back to the south. The possibility of mass returns and their damaging economic effects is dealt with in ch. 10. Various reports and interviews cited by Kindleberger give indications of attitudes to return; results vary from country to country and the data are far from conclusive. NC* Kindleberger, C.P. "Education and migration", in The Brain Drainr ed. by Walter Adams (London, Collier-Macmillan, 1968) pp. 135-155. The interest of this chapter is that it deals partly with problems of return migration of foreign scholars from American universities and includes in an appendix a selection of letters from returnees to Kindleberger complaining of conditions and problems back home. WE* King, R.L. "Problems of return migration: a case study of Italians returning from Great Britain", Tiidschrift voor Economische en sociale Geografie, vol. 68, no. 4 (1977), pp. 241-146. Reports on 30 interviews carried out in 4 south Italian villages of migrants returning from Britain. Periods spent in Britain varied between 10 and 22 years. Before emigration, most respondents were underemployed agricultural labourers. In Britain, most worked in industry, including many in the brick industry. Four main types of return migration motivations are identified: those whose return was merely a fulfilment of an original intention; those forced to return by obligation to ageing parents; those returning in order to educate their children in the Italian system; and those returning because of homesickness and failure to adapt in Britain. Special problems attach to the second generation children of returnees partly educated in Britain. Some comparisons with other work are made. [0351W] - 74 - WE* King, R. "Bedford: the Italian connection; immigrants and their homeland", Geographical Magazinef vol. 49, No. 7 (1977), pp. 442-449. Bedford has 8,000 Italians, 10% of the town's population. Half of them come from four villages in southern Italy, including one in Sicily. About half of this article is devoted to accounts of individuals who have returned, with maps and photographs of the return migrants' villages. GE King, R. "Return migration: a neglected aspect of population geography" Area, vol. 10, no. 3 (1978), pp. 175-182. The statistical background to the phenomenon of return migration is weak and information on economic possibilities for the returnees is lacking. Frameworks for looking at return migration are advanced with reference to case studies. WE* King, R. "The Maltese migration cycle: an archival survey", Area, vol. 11, No. 3 (1979), pp. 245-249. An archival survey was made in the Republic of Malta's Emigration Office of migrants returning in 1976: 1,032 migrants returned and subsequently stayed for at least 12 months. Data are presented for the returning migrants' age, sex, marital status, length of absence, occupation and address. Some differences in these characteristics were found between Maltese returning from Australia on the one hand, and the UK on the other. The distribution of migrant absences by time is bimodal with most returnees coming back either after about 2-3 years or after 10-12 years. WE* King, R. "Post-War Migration Pattern and Policies in Malta with special reference to Return Migration", European Demographic Information Bulletin,, vol. 10, no. 3 (1979), pp 108-128. The second part of this paper looks at issues of return migration in Malta. Official statistics only record migrants who returned after less than 2 years abroad, though this has recently changed. A 1977 law forbade returning migrants from taking a job (other than self-employed) or from receiving unemployment benefits for a period of 2 years after return. The causes and effects of Maltese return migration are debated. Return movements may increase in future, in spite of the 1977 law. WE* King, R. "Return migration: a review of some case studies from Southern Europe", Mediterranean Studiesf vol. 1, No. 2 (1979), pp. 4-30. This lengthy review paper collates and compares the literature on return migrants in southern Europe and the Mediterranean. First the availability (or non-availability) and inconsistency of return migration statistics are commented upon for each country. The effects of the 1967 recession in the Federal Republic of Germany on return movements are pinpointed. This is followed by a classification of return migrants by length of time abroad, by motives for return and by effects on the home area. A series of problems for returning migrants is identified and suggestions are made for policy and for filling in some of the gaps in knowledge of the return phenomenon. WE* King, R. The Maltese migration cycle: perspectives on return (Oxford Polytechnic, 1980), 77 p. This paper is a study of Maltese emigration based on interviews with 185 migrants who have returned to Malta after a spell of work abroad. The object of the research was to monitor the complete migration cycle of a group of emigrants with information collected on all stages of the cycle: - 75 the pre-migration state, departure, the period abroad, the return, and the post-return situation. Such longitudinal studies are rare in migration research. The first chapter of the study places Maltese migration in its historical setting and looks at spatial variations in intensity of outmigration and return. The interviews were carried out in all parts of Malta, including the subsidiary island of Gozo which has been particularly affected by emigration. Average age at departure was 22.6 years, at return 33.5 years. Data are also presented on sex, marital status, family size and destination, in order of importance Australia, UK, Canada and the US. Migrants to Australia show a lower propensity to return than other destinations. Most migrants came from humble backgrounds, urbanites were more likely to go to the UK. Actual periods of absence were matched with intended periods of absence. Questions on employment and social life abroad were asked. The return tends to be dominated by social or family considerations, unlike the original departure which in most cases was economically determined. The majority of migrants returned to the same district of Malta as that from which they left; the 31% returning to other districts did so usually because they had married someone from the other district. Post-return employment is distinctive in two ways, the large number of self-employed small-scale business set up (shops, bars etc.) and the large proportion of 'early retirements' amongst returnees. Most returnees earn considerably less now compared to amounts earned abroad. Migrant savings are used to enhance social rather than economic status. House styles and decorations often reflect the migrant's destination country: stone kangaroos, maple-leaf motifs etc. The concluding discussion compares Maltese migration and return migration with the experience of other Mediterranean countries. WE* King, R. and Strachan A. "The effects of return migration on a Gozitan village", Human Organization, vol. 39, no. 2 (summer 1980), pp. 175-179. Reports the results of a questionnaire survey of 52 returned migrants in the village of Qala on the Maltese island of Gozo. A similar number non-migrant control sample was also interviewed. Questionnaire data covered the entire migrant profile including sections on departure, period abroad and temporary home visits. The main focus, however, is on the return and on reintegration. Married returnees had mostly come back for good, singles only temporarily; thus in the long term a double profile is characteristic. Because of high wages and hard work abroad, and low living costs in Gozo many quite young returnees had effectively 'retired', even those under 40. For those economically active, finding work in Qala was a problem: many were self-employed. Most returnees ranked expenditure on housing as their first financial priority. The village was experiencing an explosion of remittance-financed new housing. Return migrants were less active in village affairs than non-migrants and tended to form a separate social group. WE* King R. and Strachan A. "Patterns of Sardinian migration", Tildschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografier vol. 74, No. 4 (1980), pp. 209-222. Stepwise multiple regression analysis was applied to the migration data and associated socio-economic variables for the 350 communes of Sardinia, 1961-71. Most communes experienced net migration losses. Only 19 had net inflows of population; these communes were almost entirely coastal. The analysis showed job motivations to be the main determinants of spatial variations in migration, service employment being the main explanatory variable. Return migration is related to the growth of tertiary sector employment and to recent government-fostered industrial development. [0351W] - 76 - Sardinian migrants have a strong cultural link to their island and this conditions their migration behaviour; they tend to migrate to countries which are not too far away and they have a high propensity to return. WE King, R.L., Strachan, A.J. and Di Comite, L. "Return migration in Southern Italy: a research framework", Economic Notes, no. 3 (1982), pp. 54-68. Preliminary results of a research project on return migration to Southern Italy, based on a survey conducted in the Puglia, Basilicata and Calabria regions and focusing on the economic impact of return migration. GE WE King, R., Strachan, A., Mortimer, J. Return migration: a review of the literaturef Discussion paper in Geography, No. 19 (Oxford Polytechnic, August 1983). A review of the literature on return migration is presented with particular reference to return migration to Southern Italy. The main types, trends and frameworks of return migration research are first described and the concept of return migration is defined. The geographic focus is on European return migration since World War II, but some reference is also made to the literature on the Caribbean, Southeast Asia and the United States. GE King, R., Strachan, A. Return migration: a sourcebook of evaluative abstracts. Discussion paper in Geography, No. 20 (Oxford Polytechnic, Sept. 1983), 131 p. A bibliography of over 300 items on return migration is presented together with abstracts. The items included are listed alphabetically by author; no indexes are provided. The listing is confined to works in English. The abstracts not only include summaries of the findings of the work in question but also provide an assessment of the work's importance and significance. WE King, R., Mortimer, J., and Strachan, A. "Return migration and the development of the Italian Mezzogiorno", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D Kubat (Rome-New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 79-86. Progress report on a two-year programme of research on the economic impact of return migration in the regions of Puglia, Basilicata and Calabria. WE* King, R., Strachan, A., Di Comite, L. "Migrazioni di ritorno nel Mezzogiorno d'ltalia: Presentazione di una ricerca" in Di Comite, L. and Papa, 0. (eds.) II recente assetto dei fenomeni migrator! (Bari, Istituto di Economia e Finanza dell'Universita di Bari, 1984), pp. 27-42. Research carried out in the regions of Puglia, Basilicata and Calabria to identify the employment patterns, the use of remittances and the geographical distribution of returning migrants in the Mezzogiorno. WE* King, R., Mortimer, J., Strachan, A. "Return migration and tertiary development: a Calabrian case study", Anthropological Quarterly, vol. 57, No. 3 (Washington, July 1984), pp. 112-124. The impact of return migration to Southern Europe is examined using the example of the coastal town of Amantea in Calabria, Italy. The authors demonstrate that returning migrants' capital and initiative have led to the development of a thriving tourist industry. Problems of this industry's conflicts with agriculture and with the poorest sector of the community are considered. [0351W] - 77 - WE* King, R., Mortimer, J., Strachan, J. and Viganola, M.T. "Emigrazione di ritorno e sviluppo di un comune rurale in Basilicata", Studi Emigrazione/ Etudes Migrations. No. 78 (June 1985), pp. 162-199. The study, based on a survey of 80 return migrants, examines the extent to which return migration has contributed to processes of economic changes in an agro-town in southern Italy. WE* King, R., Mortimer, J., Strachan, A. "The urban dimension of European return migration: the case of Bari, Southern Italy", Urban Studies, No. 22 (1985), pp. 219-235. Based on 211 interviews of returned migrants in the city of Bari, this paper focusses on the distinctiveness of urban return as compared with rural resettlement (a control sample of 415 rural returnees was used). The comparison concerns employment patterns, use of remittances, destination countries, duration of the migration cycle, etc. GE* King, R. (ed.) Return migration and regional economic problems (London, Sidney, Dover, Croom Helm, 1986), 296 p. Usually migrants originated from poor countries or regions where economic prospects were and are poor. Economic conditions in these poor regions have got very much worse since the onset of the world recession. A major cause of the worsening conditions is the fact that migrants are returning and looking for work in their home regions and at the same time new generations of workers are unable to travel for work both because of new international restrictions and also because of lack of work in the former host countries or regions. All this increases both economic and social pressure in what are already poor regions. This book, based on extensive original research, presents much new thinking and many new research findings on the phenomenon of return migration and on its impact on regional economic developments. GE* King, R. "Return migration and regional economic development: an overview", in R.King (ed.) Return migration and regional economic problems (London, Sydney Dover, Croom Helm, 1986), pp. 1-37. Overview of the return migration literature since the 1960s. Various definitions and typologies are discussed. WE* King, R. Strachan, A. and Mortimer, J. "Gastarbeiter go home: return migration and economic change in the Italian Mezzogiorno", in R. King (ed.) Return migration and regional economic problems (London, Sudney, Dover, Croom Helm, 1986), pp. 38-68. Survey of returned migrants in the Mezzogiorno. A sample of 705 returnees was used to analyse various features of the migration cycle: employment, education - training - innovation, savings and investments, developmental impact. WE* King, R., Mortimer, J., Strachan, A. Viganola, M.-T. "Back to Bernalda: the dynamics of return migration to a South Italian agro-town", in Paul E. White and Bert van der Knapp (eds.) Contemporary Studies of Migration (Norwich, Geo Books, 1985), pp. 155-172. WE* King, R., Mortimer, J., Strachan, A., Trono, A. "Return migration and rural economic change: a south-Italian case study", in Ray Hudson and Jim Lewis (eds.) Uneven Development in Southern Europe (London, Methuen, 1985), pp. 101-122. - 78 - WE* King, R., Strachan, A., Trono, A. Economic and Gender Aspects of Return Migration to the Italian Salento (Leicester University, Geography Department, Occasional Paper 12, 1985), 31 p. WE* Kirwan, F.S. "Recent Anglo-Irish migration: the evidence of the British Labour Force Surveys", The Economic and Social Review, vol. 13, No. 3 (1982), pp. 191-203. This paper uses unpublished data from the British Labour Force Surveys of 1973, 1975 and 1977 to shed light on recent Anglo-Irish migration, concentrating on the movement of Irish-born to and from Britain. A comparison of the British Population Census of 1971 and the 1977 Labour Force Survey suggests a net return migration of some 71,000 Irish-born persons to Ireland during this period. The age structure of this return flow is constructed by use of the 1979 Irish Population Census; the vast majority of the returnees are aged 30-44. Significant numbers of young Irish continue to enter Britain in spite of the net return. The hypothesis that recession in the British economy was the most important influence for this return is difficult to sustain with the data available. More likely they were attracted back by the relatively buoyant economic conditions in Ireland during the 1970s. WE Kivanc, C. Die tiirkische Minderhelt in Deutschland und ihre Integrationsund Ruckkehrprobleme (Minister, Universitat Munster, 1982), 63 p. AS* Kizilbash, M. "The employment of returning US educated Indians", Comparative Education Reviewr vol. 8, No. 3 (1964), pp. 320-326. The author sets out a series of structured questions which he then attempts to answer on the basis of general evidence. The questions are: Is the training received applicable to India? Do returnees have the opportunity to use their training? What sources of frustration exist? The evidence used to answer these and other questions is secondary and sometimes only anecdotal. A 1955 survey found that many remained out of work for at least a year after their return; less than 10% got the job they were trained for; 25% were thinking of re-emigrating. The Cornell Alumni study found 30% stating that their training had been useful but there were problems back home with the society and the bureaucracy. An investigation of returning agronomists was more positive: 80% found their training useful. Many problems face the returning Indian educated abroad but the system is changing slowly. GE Klinar, P. Remierants from the underdeveloped areas of emigrant society and the problems of their reintegration, paper presented at the 9th World Congress of Sociology, Uppsala, 1978. WE* Klinar, P. "Soziale Unsicherheit jugoslawischer Emigranten und Remigration unter den Bedingungen der gegenwartigen Wirtschaftskrise", in H. Kbrner and U. Mehrlander (eds.) Die "neue" Auslanderpolitik in Europa - Erfahrungen in den Aufnahme- und Entsendelandern (Bonn, Forschungsinstitut der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, 1986), pp. 181-196. NC Knowles, W.H. "Puerto Rico: problems of returning migrants", in Emigrant workers returning to their home countryf Supplement (Paris, OECD, 1967), pp. 87-123. [0351W] - 79 - WE Ko-Chih Tung, R. "Ateranpassning av invandrare: Valkommen hem-om du har pengar", Invandrare och Minoriteter, 3-4 (1976), pp. 40-43. Proposals on a Sweden-Finland return migration model. AF WE Koelstra, R.W., Tieleman, H.J. Developpement ou Migration; une enquete portant sur les possibilites de promotion de l'emploi dans des regions moins developpes de Tunlsie (La Haye, Nuffic/Imwoo Project Remplod, 1977), 84 p. Field study report on the potential impact of return migrations on Tunisian economic and social development. Presents research results and an evaluation of the role of Netherlands in promoting small scale industry, rural development. WE* KbIan, T. "An analysis of individual earnings effects due to external migration", in Turkish Workers in Europe 1960-1975; A Socio-Economic Reappraisal, (Leiden, Brill, Social, Economic and Political Studies of the Middle East, 1976), pp. 139-153. This study looks at earning patterns of migrants from Turkey before migrating, abroad and after return. After return three possible earning paths exist: (1) a return to what the migrant would have earned had he not migrated (this would tend to occur if the migrant acquired no useful skills whildst abroad); (2) a return to higher earnings than he would receive if he had not left (i.e. use of skills learnt abroad to obtain higher wages); and (3) a return to a lower level of income, possibly due to discrimination against migrants returning from abroad. Data to test these possible outcomes were collected via interviews with 340 returnees sampled from State Planning Office Surveys. Earning profiles - before, during and after migration - are presented for urban and rural migrants. The indications are that migrants' expectations of financial success are well-founded. Rural workers can anticipate a gain of 170% over a 10-year cycle but urban workers only 20%, a disturbingly low figure. Possible reasons for the low wage increases for urban returnees are advanced: inefficient use of capital in shaky businesses; lack of opportunity to use acquired skills; preference for increased leisure. WE Kollaros, T., and Mousouros Repatriation (Athens, Centre of Humanist Studies and Research, 1980), 47 p. WE Kolodni, E. "Retours migratoires et problemes de reinsertion (Exemple de Neokaisaria)", Hommes et Migrations. 967 (ler avril 1979), pp. 28-31. AS* Korale, R.B.M. et.al. Dimensions of Sri Lankan returned migration (Colombo, Ministry of Plan Implementation, Employment and Manpower Planning Division, 1985), 80 p. WE* Korkiasaari, J. "Return migration from Sweden to Finland", Yearbook of Population Research in Finlandf vol. 23, (Helsinki, 1985), pp. 137-146. This paper contains results of a study concerned with return migration from Sweden to Finland in 1980-81. The purpose of the study was to examine questions dealing with the nature of return migration and the problems of the returnees, especially insofar as factors incidental to work, financial stability and housing were concerned. The study was primarily based on information obtained from the questionnaires mailed to the returnees themselves. Some theoretical aspects of return migration are also discussed. [0351W] - 80 - WE* Korkiasaari, J. "Returnees from Sweden to Finland in 1980-81", Migration Reports, No. 18 (Helsinki, Ministry of Labour, Planning Department, 1985), 142 p. This report is a condensed version of an original report on Finnish return migration from Sweden in 1980-81. It examines the questions dealing with the nature of return migration and the problems of the returnees, especially insofar as factors incidental to work, financial stability and housing are concerned. The study focuses on the characteristics and reasons for return of a typical returnee from Sweden, as well as on the migration process per se. WE Kbrner, H., Werth, M. Ruckwanderung und Reintegration von auslandlschen Arbeitnehmnern in Europa. Beitrage zu einem internationalen Symposium des Isoplan-Instituts in Saarbrucken am 16. und 17. Oktober 1980. (Saarbrucken, Verlag Breitenbach, 1981), 161 p. Conference report on the social implications and economic implications of return migration of Greek, Italian, Turkish, Spanish and Yugoslav migrant workers from the Federal Republic of Germany, Greece, Italy, Spain, Turkey and Yugoslavia. Discusses the role of formulating a migration policy to ease re-integration, and examines changes in living conditions, employment opportunities, brain drain, capital formation and investment in the home countries (using remittances, savings). WE Kbrner, H. "Return migration from the Federal Republic of Germany", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europef ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 175-186. Statistical examination of the migration of foreigners in the Federal Republic of Germany and the unemployment of foreign workers as from 1967 to 1980, and evaluation of return policies. WE* Kbrner, H., Mehrlander, U. Die "neue" Auslanderpolitik in Europa Erfahrungen in den Aufnahmeund Entsendelandem (Bonn, Forschungsinstitut der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, 1986), 266 p. WE* Kbrner, H. "Das Gesetz zur Fbrderung der Riickkehrbereitschaft von Auslandern vom 28. November 1983 - Eine kritische Bilanz", in H. Kbrner and U. Mehrlander (eds.) Die "neue" Auslanderpolitik in Europa Erfahrungen in den Aufnahme- und Entsendelandern (Bonn, ' Forschungsinstitut der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, 1986), pp 65-72. WE Kbrner, H. "Problems of migrant workers' return to their home countries", Intereconomics (September/October 1984), pp. 235-238. Migration statistics in the Federal Republic of Germany for 1982 and 1983 show, for the first time in some years, an excess of out migration over immigration of foreign workers and their families. What are the problems facing the returnees? How can their modernizing influence on their societies be increased? WE Korte, H. "Einbiirgerung oder Ruckwanderung? Ergebnisse und Interpretationen sozialwissenschaftlicher Forschung", in W. Slim Freund, ed. Gastarbeiter (Neustadt, 1980), pp. 40.ff. [0351W] - 81 - Korte, H. "Questions centrales et resultats de la recherche en sciences sociales sur le retour et la reintegration des travailleurs migrants en Europe: Etat de la question en automne 1983", Conferencia sobre retorno e reintegracao dos emigrantes (Lisboa, Instituto de Estodos para o Desenvolvimento, June 1984), 6 p. Synthetical review of different research studies on return migration undertaken in the 1980s, in particular as regards the concept of selectivity in the process of out-migration and back-migration in European countries. Kourvetaris, G.A. "Brain Drain and international migration of scientists: the case of Greece", Greek Review of Social Research, No. 15-16 (1973), pp. 2-13. Greece has one of the world's highest rates of export of scientists, a rather small proportion of whom return, although this varies according to speciality. A repatriation campaign to recruit Greek scientists working abroad should be based on the nation's needs and capabilities; it should not invite more scientists than it can absorb. Kraak, J.H. "The repatriation of the Dutch from Indonesia", R.E.M.P. Bulletin, vol. 6, No. 2 (1958), pp. 27-40. The 1945 Indonesian revolution resulted in the gradual transformation and liquidation of the Dutch community resident in Indonesia, which numbered about 250,000 people. This process proceeded in several stages, exacerbated by the decision in 1957 that all Dutch nationals must leave the country at short notice. This led to a wave of about 45,000 repatriates to Holland in early 1958. The Dutch colony in Indonesia had existed for 300 years but grew most rapidly after the end of the 19th century. Kraak distinguishes three types of repatriates: (i) a group born and brought up in Holland who had spent much of their working lives in Indonesia; (ii) a group of descendents of racially mixed, but legally Dutch persons who had lived all their lives in Indonesia; and (iii) a group of mixed racial heritage who had spent some time in Holland, e.g. for education and training. About 60-70% of Dutch in Indonesia were of mixed race: in the strict sense these were not returnees. Culturally the Dutch in Indonesia were varied: some were ex-colonial planter types, others were 'international' in culture (the recent settlers), and yet others were lower-class mestizo, some of whom spoke little Dutch. Return migration, counter-migration and re-emigration processes were very complex in the immediate post-war period. Three main waves of repatriation are identified and then described: (1) a wave in 1945-48 made up of an elite group of professionals and colonial administrators; (ii) a second wave gathering momentum during 1949-51, consisting of servicemen returning after the victory of the Indonesian revolutionaries; (iii) the gradual departure, 1952-57, of those for whom there no longer seemed to be a place in an Indonesia deprived of its Dutchness. A final, recent wave resulted from the boycott action against the Dutch in 1957. Various types of assistance given to the repatriates are described. Integration has mostly flowed smoothly. Most have succeeded in building a new life. Relatively few needed permanent or prolonged state support. There is, however, among the repatriates a definite inclination to associate with former colonials. There are no marked racial prejudices, although the Eurasian 'remainder groups', most of whom repatriated in the late 1950s, have yet to settle down satisfactorily. - 82 - WE Kraak, J.H. "The repatriation of Netherlands citizens and Ambonese soldiers from Indonesia", Integration, vol. 4 ,No. 4, pp. 348-355. WE Kraak, J.H. The repatriation from Indonesia Printing and Publishing Office, 1958). WE Kraljec, F. Croatian migration to and from the United States, 1900-1914 (Palo Alto, Cal., Regusan Press, 1978). This study deals primarily with the group of Croatians who returned to their homeland after a temporary stay in the United States. The author concludes that economic factors were more important than political considerations in determining both emigration and repatriation. WE* Krane, R.E. "Effects of cyclical international migration upon socio-economic mobility", International Migration Review, vol. VII, No. 4 (1973), pp. 427-436. The purpose of this paper is to assess what permanent socio-economic mobility accrues to the returning Turkish migrant after a period of cyclical migration in the Federal Republic of Germany. To determine mobility, income and occupational status were examined both before and after migration for a sample of 1,433 dossiers of Turks officially sent to western Europe, of whom 228 were interviewed upon return. Wage differentials were analysed at various stages during the migration cycle: (i) between terminal pre-migration positions in Turkey and initial postmigration positions abroad; (ii) between initial and terminal positions abroad; (iii) between terminal positions abroad and currently held post-return migration positions in Turkey; and (iv) between terminal pre-migration positions and currently held post-return positions in Turkey. Ten specific occupations were identified which were pursued by sufficient numbers of migrants both at home and abroad to make possible a comparative analysis of income along occupational lines: miner, welder, electrician, metalworker, mechanic, driver, assembly-line worker, textile machine operator, machine tool operator and other factory workers. The transfer abroad led to an increase in income of 290% on average (490% for miners). Return to Turkey brought about a 61% average drop in income (miners 75%). Respondents in the 10 occupations reported that their current, post-return income was 53% up on their pre-migration incomes. Allowing for inflation, the real increment is of the order of 23%. Mobility was studied with reference to a ranking system for the 10 occupations. 61% of the sample remained essentially immobile; only 16% experienced a definite upward mobility upon return; mostly this was away from positions as miners and service workers towards positions as mechanics, shopkeepers, drivers and factory workers. Prior to migration 7% had been self-employed; since return the figure rose to 23%. Figures on savings and spending on consumer durables are given. The paper has a dense content of data which could have been more fully analysed. WE* Krane, R.E. "Manpower mobility: the case of Turkey in West Germany", International Migration, vol. 13, No. 3 (1975), pp. 112-118. The loss of skilled labour by Turkish emigration is causing concern for the Turkish government which has repeatedly appealed to labour-importing nations to help train unskilled migrants in order that they may fill posts vacated by the skilled emigrants. Trained returnees could be used in the Turkish industrial sector but there is a marked tendency for skilled returnees not to invest their assets or seek employment in industry. A much more active policy of recruiting and channelling Turkish returnees to the industrial sector is needed. [0351W] (The Hague, Government - 83 - WE* Krane, R.E. "Effects of international migration upon occupational mobility, acculturation and the labour market in Turkey", in Manpower mobility accross cultural boundaries: social, economic and legal aspects. The case of Turkey and West Germany,. Social, Economic and Political Studies of the Middle East, No. 16 (Leiden, Brill, 1976) pp. 161-204. The objectives of this important study were twofold: (i) to define demographic characteristics and motivations of the migrant and to determine what economic and cultural effects the migration experience has upon the lives of returned migrants; (ii) to learn what discernible effects the migration movement has had upon the Turkish labour market, particularly with reference to three selected regional markets: Izmir, Kocaeli and Zonguldak. Within each of these provinces a three-pronged methodology was applied: (i) official demographic data on migrants placed abroad and returned; (ii) interviews of returned migrants; (iii) interviews of management in a cross-section of Turkish industries to define the characteristics of the regional labour market in the three provinces and the extent to which the regional economy had been affected by migration. The research disclosed that a substantial majority of Turkey's emigrants are urban dwellers who had already migrated internally at least once and who possessed important industrial and craft skills from their pre-migration state. Financial considerations dominated the decision to emigrate. At least 90% of the returnees interviewed had achieved their purposes for going abroad, and an equal percentage claimed satisfaction with having made this decision. Acquisition of occupational expertise, work discipline and material gains were most often cited as important benefits realised. On the average returned migrants earned onethird more than non-migrants and clear evidence of occupational upward mobility between pre- and post-departure positions was found in nearly 20% of cases studied. Tabulation of some of the results discussed in Krane (1973) adds to the over-brief discussion of the author's earlier paper. Other data revealed noteworthy perceptivity to cultural differences on the part of the returnees and observations of attitudinal changes and work discipline by industrial management employing them. Indications are that among the now quite sizeable contingent of returned migrants Turkey possesses manpower resources which, with improved co-ordination and incentives, could be redirected to satisfy the needs for skilled labour as they currently exist. GE* Kraus, R. "Different forms, reasons and motivations for return migration of persons who voluntarily decide to return to their countries of origin", International Migration, Vol. XXIV, No. 1 (Geneva, 1986), pp. 49-60. WE Kubiak, H. "Potozenie spoteczne i ewolucja swiadomsci narodowej Iudnosci polskiej w USA w latach 1900-1919", in H. Florkowska-Francic, M. Francic, H. Kubiak, eds. Polonia wobec niepodleglosci Polski w czasie I wojny swiatowe.i (Wroclaw-Warszawa-Krakow, Ossolineum, 1979). WE Kubat, D. ed. The politics of return. International return migration in Europe (Rome and New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984). WE Kubat, A., Ozkan, Y., eds. The comparative study of the re-integration policy of five European labour exporting countries (Berlin, International Institute for Comparative Social Studies of the Science Center Berlin, 1975), 267 p. [0351W] - 84 - Based on a conference held in Berlin in June 1975. Proposals for a common approach of emigration and return migration from and to Greece, Portugal, Spain, Turkey and Yugoslavia. WE Kurmann, W. "Le retour au pays des travailleurs migrants italiens: Problemes lies a la scolarisation de leurs enfants", Feuille d'information "Cooperation Internationale dans 1'education No. 36 (nov. 1979). AF Lacoste, C. "Changements dans les roles de femmes algeriennes emigrees en France (par rapport a un contexte rural algerien): Etude de cas", Comptes rendus de recherches et bibliographie sur 1'immigrationf 8 (juil.-dec. 1975), pp. 17-24: Article presenting a case study of the social adjustments in behaviour and attitude of Algerian immigrant women in Frannce, illustrating the influence of modernization processes on social roles and the possible implications for return migration. WE* Ladbury, S. "The Turkish Cypriots: ethnic relations in London and Cyprus", in Between two cultures: Migrants and minorities in Britain, ed. by James L. Watson (Oxford, Basil Blackwell, 1977), pp. 301-331. WE* Lawless, R. "Return migration to Algeria: the impact of state intervention", in R. King (ed.) Return migration and regional economic problems (London, Sidney, Dover, 1986), pp. 213-242. Reviews three phases of Algerian emigration and the changing patterns of return migration, the Algerian government's reinsertion programme and the creation of small business by returned migrants. WE Lebon, A. "Les retours definitifs des migrants en Europe", Hommes et Migrations. 970 (15 mai 1979), pp. 25-29. WE Lebon, A. "Un bilan des retours au pays d'origine des travailleurs immigres en Europe", La documentation francaise. Problemes economiauesf 1631 (11 juillet 1979), pp. 27-29. GE Lebon, A. "L'aide au retour des travailleurs etrangers", Economie et Statistiaues. 113 (juillet-aout 1979), pp. 37-46. WE Lebon, A. and Falchi, G. "New developments in Intra-European Migration since 1974", International Migration Review, vol. 14, No. 52 (winter 1980), pp. 539-579. This lengthy article is based on a report prepared for the Conference on "European Migration in the 1980s - Trends and prospects" held by the European ministers responsible for migration affairs in Strasbourg in May 1980. Much of the article is about return migration and allied processes such as remittances and problems of the second generation. In 1974 and 1975 SOPEMI estimates indicate a return of 235,000 workers to Italy, 200,000 to Spain, 145,000 to Yugoslavia, 100,000 to Turkey and 60,000 to Greece. Since 1976 there appears to have been a stabilisation, followed by a reduction in these return flows. Taking known data, about 1 million workers returned to Southern Europe 1974-78; including countries for which data are poor or scarce, the estimate becomes 1.5 million. Remittance transfers are analysed. The economic importance of these capital transfers is stressed. Various economic incentives to return are [0351W] - 85 mentioned: France's "return grants" to departing migrants; Turkey's 200 migrant co-operative factories financed by Turkish migrants from the Federal Republic of Germany; vocational training; job creation schemes, etc. WE Lebon, A. "Return migration from France: Policies and data" in The politics of return. International return migration in Europef ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 153-169. Examines the different periods and results of the development and implementation of French policy regarding return migration. Focuses, in particular, on vocational training for return and the "aide au retour" measures. GE Leger, D. "Les utopies du retour", Actes de la Recherche en Sciences Sociales (29 September 1979), pp. 45-63. WE Leib, J. "Die Ruckkehr der spanischen Arbeitsemigranten: Rahmenbedingungen, Umfang, Griinde, raumliches Verteilungsmuster und Ergebnisse empirischer Untersuchungen in ausgewahlten Provinzen", in Untersuchuneen zur spanischen Arbeitsmierationf ed. by G. Mertins, Marburger Geographische Schriften, Heft 95 (Geographisches Institut der Universitat Marburg, 1984), pp. 151-214. AF WE Le Masne, H. Le retour des emigres algeriens: Projets et contradictionsP (Paris, Centre d'Information et d'Etudes sur les Migrations, 1982), 215 p. Monograph examining the attitude of Algerian migrant workers in France towards return migration and obstacles to their re-establishment in Algeria. Based on a 1972-1973 survey of 80 Algerian workers and their families in the Rhone-Alpes region, covers trends relative to employment opportunity, educational opportunity, migrant children, social status of women, Algerian return migration policy, social integration. AF Le Masne, H. "Emigres algeriens et perspectives du retour", Hommes et Migrationsr 867 (15 septembre 1974). AF Le Masne, H. "Les lendemains de l'aventure: des emigres algeriens parlent de leur retour au pays", Croissance des Jeunes Nations. 157 (mars 1975). AF Le Masne, H. "Le retour des Algeriens au pays", Economie et Humanismef 221 (janvier-fevrier 1975), pp. 9-20. AF Le Masne, H. Les emigres algeriens et la perspective du retour. Les pro lets de 80 emigres de la region Rhone-Alpes (Alger, Universite d'Alger, 1974). GE* Lepore, S. "Problems confronting migrants and members of their families when they return to their countries of origin", International Migration, Vol. XXIV, No. 1 (Geneva, 1986), pp. 95-112. NC Levine, B.B. "The Puerto Rican circuit and the success of return migrants", in Return Migration and Remittances: Developing a Caribbean perspective. ed. by W.F. Stinner, K. de Albuquerque and R.S. Bryce-Laporte, RUES occasional papers no. 3 (Washington D.C. 1982), pp. 157-181. - 86 - Analysis of the development of Puerto Rican-United States relationship. Statistics of exodus and return migration and life histories of the returnees. WE* Lewis, J. and Williams, A. "Portugal: the decade of return", Geography, vol. 70, part 2, No. 307 (April 1985), pp. 178-182. Recent international migration trends affecting Portugal are described. Separate sections are included on emigrants, return migrants from Europe, and returning colonists from former Portuguese colonial territories. WE* Lewis, J. and Williams, A. "The economic impact of return migration in central Portugal", in R. King (ed.) Return migration and regional economic problems (London, Sidney, Dover, Croom Helm, 1986), pp. 100-128. Results of a survey undertaken in 1982 among returned migrants in the centre region. The study sought to compare the determinants of the economic behaviour of return migrants and people who had not moved in contrasting economic environments. WE* Lianos P.T. "Flows of Greek out-migration and return migration", International Migration, vol. 13, no. 3 (1975), p. 119-133. Emigration from Greece has been little studied, the return movement even less. Official data and estimates of return migration to Greece are presented for 1960-70. A returning migrant is defined as someone who has been abroad for at least one year and intends to stay in Greece for at least one year. Half of all Greek returnees come from the Federal Republic of Germany, and another 25% from Canada, the US and Australia. Contrary to popular belief return migration as a percent of gross outmigration is not higher for the Federal Republic of Germany than for overseas countries. For 1986-73 return was 36.6% of gross outmigration. Returnee flows are somewhat different in character from emigration flows. For example, 51.6% of emigrants leave from rural areas but only 31.3% of returnees go to rural areas. The reverse is true for urban areas: 35.3% of emigrant origins and 55.1% of returnee destinations. The semi-rural category is more balanced. Employment factors and familiarisation with urban lifestyles whilst abroad are factors possibly explaining the urban orientation of returnees. Returnees, as expected, are older than emigrants. The result is a shrinking of the Greek population at the most productive ages. Migration also changes the skill mix and occupational preference of returning as opposed to leaving migrants; the main trend is a drift from agriculture. Reduction in unemployment differentials between the Federal Republic of Germany and Greece seems to be instrumental in explaining return flows. WE Lianos, T.P. "Movement of Greek labor to Germany and return", Greek Economic Reviewf vol. 2, no. 1 (April 1980), pp. 71-77. Estimates of the total volume of return migration from the Federal Republic of Germany to Greece. Data are for the period 1959 to 1976. WE* Livi Bacci, M. "The countries of emigration", in The demographic and social pattern of emigration from the Southern European countries, ed. by M. Livi Bacci, (Florence, Dipartimento Statistico Matematico dell' Universita di Firenze, 1972), pp. 7-123. This long introductory paper looks at the migration situation as it affects Yugoslavia, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Greece and Turkey. A lot of basic information is given on temporal and spatial patterns of flows, quality of migration data for the various countries, characteristics of [0351W] - 87 - the migrants and their motives for moving, and the characteristics of the emigration areas, which are mostly rural except for Yugoslavia and Turkey. The most detailed data referred to are the surveys carried out by the Italian Ministry of Labour and Social Security (1964), the Central Italian Statistics Institute (1969) and the Italian Committee for Population Studies (1970). These include data on remittances, family contacts and return. There is a special section on return migration towards the end of the paper. Within Southern Europe only Italy and Greece record return movements from other European countries; Portugal notes only overseas returnees. Lack of official data prevents any insight into the demographic and economic characteristics of returnees. Empirical studies are mostly small-scale, are based on a confused definition of the universe of migrants who return and are therefore generally unrepresentative. A major exception is the Italian Statistics Institute questionnaire survey of 80,000 families which had at least one member returning from abroad during 1962-68. In summary, the following points emerge from this and other data sources. During 1959-68 the ratio of returnees to emigrants varied from 54% (1960) to 97% (1967); the average was 75%. Data from the Federal Republic of Germany show that many returnees subsequently re-emigrated to this country fairly soon after. From the Italian survey, two-thirds stayed abroad for less than 1 year, less than 10% for more than 5 years. The average period abroad is 20 months for Italians returning from the EEC, 15 months for those returning from Switzerland. Occupational data are illuminating. From the ISTAT survey 65% of returnees went back to their pre-migration type of employment. For building and farm workers the figure was over 70%. Any skills learnt abroad are generally not used on return. Returnees tend to settle in the place from which they left; 95% of Italian returnees went back to the same province. Motives for return home were: expiry of contract (27%), occupation/job in Italy (15%), family reasons (23%), illness (22%) and 'others' (13%). These figures are then disaggregated by destination country, region of return and duration of stay abroad. Remittances are mainly used for the current needs of the family, but some may be directed towards enlarging, modernising or building a house, buying land and setting up a small commercial establishment. The developmental impact of these investments is small. Lohrman, R., and Manfrass, K., eds. Auslanderbeschaftigung Internationale Politik (Oldenbourg Verlag, Munich 1974), 395 p. und Lohrman, R. "European migration: recent developments and future prospects", International Migration, vol. 14, No. 3 (1976), pp. 229-240. Looks at the migration scene in Europe since the 1974 depression. Numbers moving from south to north dropped dramatically as receiving countries shifted to more restrictive policies. Turkey, for instance, sent 104,000 workers to the Federal Republic of Germany in 1973, only 1,200 in 1974. Return movements have yet to become massive, but have increased since 1975. Reintegration projects are few but there are moves towards a new, more co-ordinated policy. The Federal Republic of Germany and Turkey have jointly conducted a training programme for skilled workers. France is encouraging Algerian, Moroccan and Portuguese workers wanting to return to their home country to obtain better vocational training. Lombardo, A. "Rientro degli emigrant! e comportamento politico", Affari Sociali Internazionali. vol. 2, no. 1-2 (1974), pp. 37-44. Relations between return migration and communist votes in Italy. - 88 - WE* Lopreato, J. Peasants no more. Social class and social change In an underdeveloped society (San Francisco, Chandler, 1967). This is a book about rural social change, specifically about the exodus of peasants from a village in Calabria, southern Italy and their eventual return and consequent effects on village social stratification. Two waves of emigration have taken people away from Franza (the pseudonym for the village). The first started at the end of the 19th century and continued until 1913; it was directed mainly to America. The second, post-war stream is mainly European. Of the 6 social strata identified by Lopreato in Franza, returnees play an important part in two. Old emigrants returning from America are an important element in Stratum III, made up also of shopkeepers, skilled artisans and small land-owners. Returnees move up to this class from much humbler origins because of their improved financial status and because they are able to support their children's education beyond minimum school level. Many of this group of returnees have bought land and improved their housing. Although these 'American returnees' claim to have seen the world, they are the object of some derision and pity on the part of other villagers. They remain isolated. Their grasp of American culture is usually very partial and distorted. They are called 'fessi Americani' (American fools) in Franza. Stratum IV, a new social group, is made up largely of more recent returnees, from Europe and also from America. Although these recent returnees are often as wealthy as the old returnees, it seems that acquired wealth has to go through an ageing process before it can buy higher status. Again, upward movement is also achieved by educating children. Recent returnees are responsible for most of the village's land sales and house building. They are resented, however, for their ostentatious behaviour and for their lack of respect for the traditional landed and professional elites. Overall, emigration has profound structural effects on rural social classes; it is the main factor behind social mobility in rural Italy. NC* Lowe, G.A. "A study of Jamaican students at Harvard University, 1961-62, Journal of Negro Education, vol. 33, No. 4 (1963), pp. 450-453. Of 143 interviewed Jamaican students at Harvard, 80% expected to return. These students lived in a Jamaican community at Harvard so very little alienation from their natuve culture had occurred. They anticipated successful careers, and the expected price that their families were going to derive from their achievement was a strong motive to return. NC* Lowenthal, D. West Indian Societies (London, Oxford University Press, 1972), 385 p. This book about the plurality of West Indian societies includes, in a chapter on emigration, a substantial amount of material on return. Lowenthal points out that the impact of return migration varies with the migrant's background, length of stay abroad and the actual circumstances of return. Much is expected of the returnee. He must return able to visibly demonstrate wealth and success. In the French Antilles the migrant returns home 'to be deified'. Homecoming is a triumphal occasion. But longer-term prosperity is often elusive. Jobs are scarce and wages low. Many re-emigrate, and some confess to being homesick for Britain. Returnees often complain of the slow, unchanging pace of life; they become bored with the same narrow circle of friends. Even more is expected of the returnees who come back with advanced education, including university degrees. They are almost automatically catapulted into positions of power. Some make an impact but many do not, never living up to their billing as champions of innovation and modernity. [0351W] - 89 WE Lucrezio, G. pp. 3-8. WE Lucrezio, G. "Les migrants retournant dans leur pays", Migrations dans le Monde, vol. 1 (1969), pp. 8-9. WE Ludolph, E., Jalla, P. Enquiry related to the return of migrant workersf Churches Committee on Migrant Workers in Western Europe. (Geneva, 1966). WE Luetkens, C. AS* Lutfiyya, A.M. Bavtin: a Jordanian Village. A study of social institutions and social change in a Folk community (The Hague, Mouton, 1966), 202 p. In this study the author examines his own native village which is situated near Ramallah, a town, now under Israeli rule, on the West Bank part of Palestine. Emigration is a fundamental part of village life and its effects are frequently referred to. The 'American quarter' is a section of the village where returned migrants live in big, new houses; the contrast with the humble conditions of the rest of the village is great. English is spoken in the American quarter and Western-style clothes are worn. Emigration and return is the biggest force reshaping the village's socio-economic structure. Remittances and savings are used to buy land, build new houses and even invest in industrial enterprises. The inflow of cash from migrants has stimulated local banking activities. This book provides some interesting insights into the effects of return migration but the analysis is rather shallow, with few systematic data. WE* Macmillen, M. "The economic effects of international migration: a survey", Journal of Common Market Studiesf vol. 20 No. 3, (1982), pp. 245-267 This paper examines the question of the relative costs and benefits of European labour migration to the labour importing countries and the labour exporting countries. After reviewing a lot of evidence, much of it from OECD publications, the author concludes that labour importing countries have benefited more than the exporting states. Sections of the paper look at returnees and their employment characteristics, again derived from secondary sources, and at remittances and their impact. A drawn-out article which expresses only tentative conclusions. WE Maier, R. "Uberlegungen iiber Notwendigkeit und MSglichkeiten der Fbrderung der freiwilligen Ruckkehr auslandischer Arbeitnehmer", Arbeitsund Sozialrecht, vol. 27, no. 9 (1978), pp. 196-199. WE Majava, A. Migration from and to Finland in 1977 (Helsinki, Ministry of Labour, 1978), 21 p. This reports deals with emigration to and return from Sweden. It shows that the actual emigration in Sweden is presently restrained since the recession has lowered the demand for foreign labour. WE Mancho, S. Emigracion v desarrollo espanol (Madrid, Instituto Espanol de Emigracion, 1978), 175 p. Monograph on the role of emigration in the economic growth of Spain. Sets out the reasons for and the positive and negative economic implications and social implications of emigration, internal migration and return migration, and discusses future migration policy of host countries. [0351W] "II ritorno degli emigrati", Italian! nel Mondof 25 (1969), Die ungliickliche Ruckkehr (Frankfurt/New York 1981). - 90 - WE Mancho-Gomez, S. "El retorno de los emigrantes", Razon y Fe (Feb. 1976), pp. 139-152. Return migration to Spain from Switzerland, the Federal Republic of Germany and France after the European economic crisis. WE* Manemann, W. Riickkehr portugiesischer Arbelter in ihr Heimatdorf. Eine Studie in den Regionen Minho und Beira Baixa: Europaische Hochschulschriften 19/A, vol. 25, (n.p., n.d.) The author proceeds from the question of whether, in the case of Portuguese workers from the rural areas of Minho and Beira Baixa, any processes of change can be observed - after at least two years' work in the Federal Republic of Germany or France - in terms of the cultural situation of the individual and his family and of their behaviour and attitude, to whether there are any observable effects upon the village's social structure. These questions are treated within the framework of an empirical study (150 intensive interviews), carried out from June 1980 to January 1981. WE* Manfrass, K., "Riickkehrfbrderung - Der Fall Frankreich", in H. Kbrner and U. Mehrlander (eds.) Die "neue" Auslanderpolitik in Europa - Erfahrungen in den Aufnahme- und Entsendelandern (Bonn, Forschungsinstitut der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, 1986), pp 73-86. WE Manganara, I. Study of returnees to rural areas in Greecef enquete effectuee sous les auspices de 1'Alliance des Unions chretiennes feminines (Geneve, 1973). WE* Nanganara, I. "Some social aspects of the return movement of Greek migrant workers from West Germany to rural Greece", The Greek Review of Social Research, No. 29 (1979), pp. 65-75. This article is based on 72 interviews of Greek returnees from the Federal Republic of Germany, carried out in the islands of Corfu and Rhodes in 1973. Over half the interviewees were women. Most had been abroad for less than 5 years although many had alternated periods abroad with periods at home over a longer time span. Without explaining why or specifying by what criteria, Manganara classifies most returnees as 'failures'. Most migrants acquired industrial experience, although few formal qualifications. However, industrial jobs hardly exist on Corfu and Rhodes. The most positive aspect is the way in which returnees have been able to get jobs in construction and tourism upon return, especially in Corfu, where the development of these sectors has been more recent. Migrants' savings are employed for subsistence, housing, land purchase, farm machinery, small business (shop, bar, etc.), car/motorcycle. Half the interviewees plan to return to the Federal Republic of Germany. Returned migrants generally exist outside the local patterns of honour and patronage which are such important features of village life amongst non- migrants. Returnees also suffer from a feeling of uncertainty and uprootedness which can be termed 'diffuse deprivation'. Although this is one of the few return migration studies carried out in a tourist area, the analysis is weak and unconvincing. NC* Manners, R.A. "Remittances and the unit of analysis in anthropological research", Southwestern Journal of AnthropologyP vol. 21, No. 3 (1965), pp. 179-195. [0351W] - 91 Argues that anthropological fieldwork on families and communities in the Caribbean must conceptually be extended to include those members living abroad, since the money they send back greatly influences family, culture and economy in the home area. The remittance unit or group thus becomes a valid focus for analysis. Country by country inventories of foreign cash flows are made: remittances often account for 5% of total national income. WE Marques dos Santos, A. "Les emigrants portugais et le retour au pays", Options mediterraneennes, vol. 4, no. 22 (1973), pp. 67-69 WE Marselli, G.A. "Un ritorno doloroso, un'occasione da non perdere", Studi Emigrazione/Etudes Migrations, No. 63 (settembre 1981), pp. 305-317. NC* Marshall, D.I. "International migration as circulation: Haitian movement to the Bahamas", in R.M. Prothero and M. Chapman (eds.), Circulation in Third World Countries (London etc., Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1985), pp. 226-240. Presents background data on the movement of Haitians, especially from the North-West Department to the Bahamas, and reports on a survey carried out in 1971 among 135 adult Haitians living in Carmichael, close to Nassau, the capital of the Bahamas, mostly in an irregular situation. Main subjects examined are maintenance of links with home, return visits, remittances, social bonds tying Haitians to their home as well as to the Bahamas, and the question of whether this movement should be characterised as circulation, temporary-cum-return migration or permanent settlement. WE Martinez Cachero, L.A. "El retorno de los emigrantes Revista de Trabaiof vol. 19, no. 3 (1967), pp. 7-20. LA AS Maselli, G. Transfer of technology through international movements of manpower (The Hague, R.E.M.P., 1977), 23 p. Examines the different aspects of the transfer of technology with special reference to movements of qualified migrants between developing countries in Latin America and the Arab regions. Includes ICM programmes for selective migration and return of talents. NC* Maykovich, M.K. "To stay or not to stay: dimensions of ethnic assimilation", International Migration Reviewr vol. 10, No. 3 (1976), pp. 377-387. As the title implies, this paper deals tangentially with return. It examines the implication of Asian sojourners' status upon their assimilation into American society, and criticises and refines the simple linear hypothesis that sojourners are less likely than immigrants to assimilate into the host society because of ties with their countries of origin. The simple 'Asian, Asian-American, American' model of assimilation is not applicable. 600 Asians (Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos) were interviewed in San Francisco. Based on a variety of indices they were classified as "high" or "low" identification on both American and Asian cells (giving four possibilities) for three levels, social, cultural and psychological. The results are too complex to be briefly summarised. Sojourners are not necessarily less assimilated than immigrants; their commitment to return does not necessarily lessen their identification with America. AS* McArthur, H.J. "The effects of overseas work on return migrants and their home communities: a Philippine case", Papers in Anthropology, vol. 20, no. 1 (spring 1979), pp. 85-104. [0351W] espanoles", - 92 - In an attempt to provide insight into issues of return migration in a non-Western context, this paper examines some of the social-psychological factors which have influenced the readjustment of Filipino migrant labourers returning from work on Hawaiian sugar plantations. An important initial point is made: return phenomena cannot be understood in isolation from the original migration motives. This case study concerns Ilocanos migrants from the overpopulated northern Ilocos coast of Luzon. Three characteristics distinguish these migrants: first, they were guaranteed jobs and recruited in their home communities; second, they migrated to a rural environment and not an urban ghetto; third, the decision to return was made before they left. An account is given of the rigours of plantation life in Hawaii. Remittances were sent regularly. Failures often lost their money in gambling; upon return they were gossiped about and ridiculed. But the main distinction amongst returnees is length of absence. Hence the author distinguishes 'short timers', 'old hands' and 'pensionados'. Short timers left for 3-6 years and returned whilst still young. They had few reintegration problems but brought back little by way of innovative behaviour. Their first priority was to buy riceland. Old hands returned after 20-30 years. Many of these had progressed from plantation workers to hotel and restaurant workers in Hawaii. They changed their goals, behaviour and self-perception. As a result they experienced readjustment problems upon return. For example, they resisted arranged marriages. They were also more innovative upon return, planting new rice varieties, introducing new domestic conveniences, running for local office etc. Pensionados came back at 65 with a US pension and retirement bonus. They were wealthy by local standards but spend money in ways that add to their status rather than generate more income. Most build brightly painted luxury houses, give parties and act as sponsors at weddings and baptisms. Some even get married after return, taking young wives of 18-19 years of age. Yet they remain on the fringe of barrio life and are sometimes exploited. The greater innovative behaviour of the old hands category is related to role ambiguity. Often this resulted in economic innovation but social conform!sm after return. WE* McDonald, J.R. "The repatriation of French Algerians 1962-63", International migration (1963), pp. 146-157. It is surprising to find that the repatriation of 950,000 French Algerians has occasioned such little interest. This paper looks at three aspects of the repatriation: the numbers involved and their rhythm of movement (the peak rate of return was reached in June 1962); the regional distribution of the repatriates in France (most went to Paris and the Midi); and finally their problems and impact on return. Three problems were faced by the refugees: the inadequate response by the French Government which was taken by surprise by the speed and magnitude of the exodus; employment (repatriates were not trained to fill the technical and industrial jobs available in France); and housing (many endured overcrowding, long waiting lists and high rental costs). WE* McLane, M.F. "Return migration of an ethnic minority: the Spanish gypsy", Papers in Anthropology, vol. 20, No. 1 (1979), pp. 117-125. Few studies have been made of ethnic minorities within migration streams. This unusual and fascinating paper looks at return experiences of gypsies in the region of Guadix in southern Spain. The Guadix area has 2,500 sedentary gypsies. In the city of Guadix they are regarded as the lowest class and treated derogatorily; in the cave-dwelling villages round about they are treated socially as no different to other non-gypsy working class, although they do have their own social customs such as early [0351W] - 93 - marriage and disregard for formal education, and they do link with certain occupations such as horse-trading, blacksmiths, basket-weaving and seasonal agricultural labour. Many gypsies have been forced to emigrate because of falling demand for their goods and traditional services. Gypsy returnee behaviour has both similarities and differences to that of other local returnees. The first priority is better clothing. No longer are gypsies barefoot and dressed in rags. Household furnishings are another priority. Proper beds replace mats and straw, and a range of modern cooking utensils is added to the previously all-purpose kettle. Other consumer goods include easy chairs, radios, televisions, cycles and occasionally cars. But unlike non-gypsies, hardly any gypsy returnees renounce their caves for new housing. Caves are enlarged and improved but not abandoned. In places, however, gypsies buy housing from non-gypsy emigrants who have left for good or built new homes. Nor do gypsies try to set themselves up in business upon return, except as small-scale farmers. Gypsies buy small plots of valley bottom land, even though they have no tradition of landownership. Returnee gypsies are generally not viewed any differently by non-gypsies than they were before they emigrated. They are still treated as equals in rural areas but reviled in the city. Nor have they changed their social customs through migration. McLean Petras, E. "Economic consequences of migration and return", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 251-257. Assesses whether trends of foreign investment and trade may be linked to recent cross-national flows of labour. Examines the immigration policies adopted by the European receiving countries and the role of immigrant labour as a regulator of cyclical unemployment. McLean Patras, E. "Return migration to Greece. Labor migrants, Eastern European refugees and high level manpower", Conferencia sobre retorno e reinteeracao dos emigrantes (Lisboa, Instituto de Estudos para o desenvolvimento, June 1984), 14 p. Examines cross-national migration of Greeks and their subsequent return at two levels of analysis: (i) migrant behaviour (motivations for emigration and contributions of migrant households to local regional and national development), (ii) structural context in which migratory movements take place. Mehrlander, U. "Soziale Folgen der Auslanderpolitik: Integration oder Remigration", ITZ Info-Dienstf No. 4 (Essen, October 1983), pp. 3-6 Mehrlander, U. "L'avenir de 1'immigration: rapatriement ou politique d'integration des etrangers en Republique Federale d'Allemagne?" Conferencia sobre retorno e reintegracao dos emigrantes (Lisboa, Instituto de Estudos para o desenvolvimento, June 1984), 6 p. Reviews and discusses the measures taken by the Federal Republic of Germany (i) to integrate migrant workers and their families and (ii) to facilitate their return to their home countries. Statistical appendix on the financial assistance granted by the Federal Republic of Germany to Portuguese, Spanish, Tunisian, Turkish and Yugoslav returnees up to May 1984. Mendez, J.I.C., Moro, O.C. "The relation between migration policy and economic development and the promotion of new employment possibilities for returnees (foreign investment and migrant remittances)", International Migration,, vol. 14 (1976), pp. 134-162. - 94 WE Mendonsa, E.L. "Benefits of Migration as a personal strategy in Nazare, Portugal", International Migration Review, Vol. 16, No. 59 (fall 1982), pp. 635-645. Analysis of the causes, patterns and results of involvement in international wage labour migration for Nazare. Describes the local investment opportunities for return migrants. WE* Menke, D. "Politische, technische und finanzielle Kooperation zwischen Aufnahme- und Entsendelandern aus der Sicht der OECD", in H. Korner and U. Mehrlander (eds.) Die "neue" Auslanderpolitik in Europa - Erfahrungen in den Aufnahme- und Entsendelandern (Bonn, Forschungsinstitut der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, 1986), pp.257-260. WE Merico, F. "II difficile ritorno. Indagine sul rientro degli emigrati in alcune communita del Mezzogiorno", Studi Emigrazione/Etudes migrations. No. 50 (1978), pp. 179-212. Survey on the return of Italian migrants, carried out in 4 southern Italian towns in 1974. WE Merico, F. "II ritorno degli emigrant! alle communita di origine: motivazioni et problem!", Affari Social! Internazionalif 4 (die. 1973), pp. 3-39. AS* Merriam, M.F. "Reversing brain drain, a case study from India", International Development Reviewf No. 3 (1970), pp. 16-22. A detailed questionnaire survey of 225 faculty and other staff at the Indian Institute of Technology at Kanpur revealed that identification with national development goals was the major reason for return from overseas. Most of the academics questioned were engineers and scientists. Of the entire sample 141 had been abroad for study or work; various profiles of time spent abroad are described, the most common being bachelor's and/or master's degree in India followed by PhD abroad and then immediate return (104 cases). 15% had been abroad for at least 8 years; the median was 5 years. Most respondents did not believe brain drain to be a serious problem for India. Various reasons for going abroad to study and research are given. Reasons for return indicate that commitment to the development of India loomed large. The role of the particular institute in which they worked was an incidental factor; most would have returned irrespective of its existence. The difficulty of getting jobs fixed up in India prior to return acts as a disincentive to return, although the Scientists Pool (see Abraham 1968) helps. IIT Kanpur has, however, recruited some of its staff directly from Indians abroad, and many returnees were attracted by the notion of this specialised centre of Indian scientific and technological excellence. WE Mertins, G. "Riickwanderung spanischer Arbeitnehmer aus dem europaischen Ausland. Raumliches Verteilungsmuster und Investitionsverhalten in Spanien", in Riickwanderung und Reintegration von auslandischen Arbeitnehmern in Europa. ed. by H. Korner and M. Werth (Saarbriicken, Verlag Breitenbach, 1981), pp. 63-75. WE* Mertins, G. "Reintegration riickkehrender Arbeitsmigranten als Problem der Entwicklung regionaler Arbeitsmarkte in den Entsendelandern - Generelle Thesen und Desiderata" in H. Korner and U. Mehrlander (eds.) Die "neue Auslanderpolitik in Europa - Erfahrungen in den Aufnahme- und Entsendelandern (Bonn, Forschungsinstitut der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, 1986), pp. 243-250. - 95 - AS* Meyer, G. "Labour emigration and economic development in the Yemen Arab Republic: and investigation of the case of employment in the building sector in San'a", Applied Geography and Developmentt vol. 23 (Tubingen, 1984), pp. 55-71 This study is concerned with the extent to which temporary labour migration benefits the country of origin, particularly with regard to the acquisition of skills abroad and their subsequent use following return. The focus is on the impact on the construction industry in the capital of the Yemen Arab Republic, San'a, and the data were obtained during the course of interviews undertaken in 1982 with 2,500 construction workers. The regions of origin of construction workers and their experience abroad are analysed. WE Meznaric, S., Klinar, P., Tos, N. and Zizek, F. "An action programme to attract Slovene workers to return home", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europef ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 137-140. In order to identify the "migration component" in development, a region of Slovenia was selected as the target of a "field experiment". The objectives were to identify the role of change agents and to let them interact with the target population in order to facilitate return migration where it was so desired. AF MFX "Le retour des emigres algeriens", Accueillir, 97 (fevrier 1983), pp. 8-12. GE Michotey, C. and Dias, M. "Debat: Une bonne formation doit permettre le libre choix des immigres pour le retour", Alphabetisation et Promotion, 86 (juil.-aout 1973), pp. 7-11. WE Mikkola, K. "Return migration from Sweden to Finland in 1946-1970", Yearbook of Population Research in Finland, vol.13 (1973-74), pp. 115-124. WE Milano, M. "II problema dei rimpatri dei Formazione e Lavoro, 25-26 (1967), pp. 95-98. WE* Miller, D.R. and Cetin, I. "Migrant workers, wages and labour markets: an economic model", in R.E. Krane (ed.) Manpower mobility across cultural boundaries: social, economic and legal aspects. The case of Turkey and West Germany, (Leiden: Brill, Social, Economic and Political Studies of the Middle East, 1976), pp. 124-137. This chapter focuses on the individual Turkish emigrant and presents a model which attempts to explain why the average worker desires to migrate, the manner and timing by which he allocates his foreign earnings, and his aspirations upon his return to Turkey. Workers' earnings abroad are disaggregated into a country and purpose matrix: Turkey and the Federal Republic of Germany, and standard of living maintenance and asset accumulation. Determinant social and economic factors are discussed. Survey results are presented in an attempt to verify the hypotheses of the model (nine are specified) and to ascertain policy-relevant findings with respect to (i) private rates of return, (ii) employment impact, including skill acquisition and increased mobility, (iii) wealth effect in terms of utilised savings. In the Federal Republic, Turkish migrants can save or remit 1-5 times the amount [0351W] lavoratori italiani", - 96 - of their previous pre-migration income. Industrial learning is more rapid in the Federal Republic of Germany. Private financial gains for the migrant have to be set against the loss of skilled labour by Turkish industrial entrepreneurs and the increased labour turnover they suffer in their enterprises. GE Miller, E. "Return and non-return in migration", Growth and Change, vol. 11, No. 4, pp. 3-9. AF Ministere du Travail, France Informations, 18 juin 1978, 9 p. AF Ministere du Travail et de la Participation "Nombre d'etrangers ayant beneficie de l'aide au retour", Hommes et Migrationsf 973 (juillet 1979), pp. 21-22. LA Ministerie van Sociale Zaken en Werkgelegenheid Retourmigratie van Mediterranenf Surinamers en Antillianen uit Nederland (Den Haag, 1983), 290 p. WE* Ministero degli Affari Esteri - Direzione Generale Emigrazione e Affari Social! Guida pratica delle norme emanate dallo Stato e dalle Region! a favore degli emigrati Rome, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 1985), 718 p. Compilation of Italy's national and regional assistance measures in favour of returning migrants. WE Ministry of Labour, Greece Greece (Athens, July 1982). WE Mira, G. "L'integrazione economica europea e il problema degli emigrant!", Studi Economlci e social!f Vol. 14, No. 1 (Genn-Marzo 1979), pp. 49-59. GE* Miracle, M.P. and Berry, S.S. "Migrant labour and economic development", Oxford Economic Papers, vol. 22, No. 1 (1970), pp. 86-108. An important theoretical statement on the migration-development dynamic, with a wealth of empirical findings referenced as well. The impact of migrant labour on economic development is complex and varies according to a number of factors including length of stay and the relative characteristics of home and destination economies. Much of the literature referred to is Third World, especially African. A substantial section of the article looks at economic effects of return migration, including the spread of new techniques, especially in farming; the accumulation of capital, both monetary and human (skill) capital; and the changes in consumption patterns and expectations. WE Moffa, M. "Regional measures in Italy in favour of returning migrants", Migration News, 23 (1974), pp. 3-5. A brief note on the measures offered to returning migrants by the Italian region of Friuli-Venezia Giulia for resettlement and housing. WE Moll Marques, J. "Die Riickkehr in die Heimat. Politische und gesellschaftliche Auswirkungen", in E. Klee (ed.) Gastarbeiter; Analysen und Berichte (Frankfurt a.M., 1972), pp. 137-146. WE Mongardini, C. "Fenomeni migratori e ritorno degli emigranti, Affari Sociali Internazionali, vol. 1, No. 4 (1973), pp. 51-79. [0351W] "Le retour des migrants", Migrations/ The training of emigrants returning to - 97 - WE* Monson, T.D. "Industrial learning experiences of Turkish workers at home and abroad", Journal of Developing Areasf vol. 9 No. 2 (1975), pp. 221-236. Data collected from 135 Turkish workers standardised for job types in 5 Turkish and 5 German factories enabled the author to explore the learning experiences of Turks in Turkish industry and Turks in industry in the Fed. Rep. of Germany, the costs of that experience and the effect on productivity. Although there are severe data problems (small sample size, collinearity etc.), acknowledged by the author, the results confirm that: (i) entrants to industry do go through an industrial learning process; (ii) Turks in the Fed. Rep. of Germany go through this process quicker than Turks in Turkey, where the lack of a skilled labour force is a constraint on industrial growth; and (iii) Turks in German industry are more productive than they are at home. The evidence supports the contention that an efficient way for Turkey to develop an industrial labour force would be to encourage the return of Turkish migrants trained in industry abroad. WE* Monson T.D. "Differences in industrial learning behaviour of Turkish workers at home and abroad: causes and consequences", in R.E. Krane (ed.), Manpower mobility across cultural boundaries; social, economic and legal aspects. The case of Turkey and West Germany. (Leiden, Brill, Social, Economic and Political Studies of the Middle East, 1976), pp. 95-123. This chapter analyses the problems of converting a predominantly rural population such as Turkey's into an industrial labour force and comes to the conclusion that return migrants could be cost-effectively used as a basis for such a factory work force. This conclusion is reached theoretically rather than empirically, by looking at industrial learning behaviour of Turkish workers in the Federal Republic of Germany's industry and in Turkish industry. Industrial training is quicker and more efficient in the Federal Republic of Germany than in Turkey where the lack of an established labour force is a handicap to further expansion of industrial employment. The policy implication of this study is that the Turkish government should make strenuous efforts to recruit back migrants into industry* WE Monteiro Neto, F.F. Le retour des migrants Portugais: contribution a 1'etude d'une etiologie du retour au pays natalp These du 3eme cycle (Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris, 1980), 400 p. WE* Moreau, G. et Debart, M.-H. "Le retour et la reinsertion des travailleurs etrangers aux pays d'origine", Droit Social. No. 9-10 (septembre-octobre 1985), pp. 683-691. Simplified but precise and comprehensive explanation of the French return programme put into effect since 1984, followed by a statistical evaluation of its results. An informative and useful presentation. WE Morokvasik, M. "Des migrants temporaires: les Yougoslaves", Sociologie du Travail, vol. 14, No. 3 (July-Sept. 1972), pp. 260-277 Study on the phenomenon of return migration to Yugoslavia from France. Based on two surveys, one in France and one in Yugoslavia, the author compares the migrants' intentions with the likely outcome of their movements. - 98 - WE* Morokvasic, M. "Emigration of women and some subsequent social transformations", Migration Today, No. 18 (1974), pp. 117-128. About one-third of migrants in Europe are female. In this article the question is raised as to whether the women have the same chance as men of finding employment when they return. The suggestion is that they are disadvantaged and that the return of women is a more complex issue. This is illustrated with examples from Yugoslavia - e.g. women non-migrants in a Croatian factory who were expected to leave to make way for returning male migrants. WE Morokvasic, M., Rogers, R. "Employment creation through migrants' loans to enterprises in Yugoslavia", in Return Migration to Yugoslavia: policiesf the innovative return migrant and prospects for economic development. Final report submitted by Mirjana Morokvasic and Rosemarie Rogers to the Rockefeller-Ford Research Program on Population and Development Policy, 1982. WE Morokvasic, M. "Strategies of return of Yugoslavs in France and the Federal Republic of Germany", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 87-92. Motivation to return, family reunificaton, savings and remittances of Yugoslavs in France and the Federal Republic of Germany. The role of information and the search for jobs back home. WE Montara, G. "Cento anni di emigrazione italiana per il Brasile: nota statistica", Giornale degli Economisti e Annali dl Economia. vol. 21, No. 9/10 (Sept.-Oct. 1962), pp. 573-581. Presents and discusses quinquennial data, 1861-65 to 1956-60 and annual data 1951-1961 on Brazilian statistics of arrivals of immigrants and Italian statistics of emigrants and returnees. NC Motuz, C. Return migration; an analysis of return migration from Canada: 1969-1974, mimeographed report of the Research Projects Group (Project R-22), Ottawa, Department of Manpower and Immigration. WE Mousouros, L. and Siambos, G. Socio-cultural integration in Germany and reintegration of the migrants returning to Greece, paper presented at the European Science Foundation Workshop on Cultural Identity and Structural Marginalisation of Migrant Workers (Bochum, 10-12 Dec. 1980). WE Mughini, C. "L'emigrazione di ritorno: problem! e prospettive per un reinserimento produttivo degli emigrati in Yugoslavia", Studi Emigrazione/Etudes Migrations, vol. XVIII, No. 62 (June 1981), pp. 207-238. Results of a survey carried out in Yugoslavia during the period 1977-1979. Analysis of the limits of a productive reintegration model and formulation of some alternative hypotheses. WE* Mundt, H.W. "Politische, technische und finanzielle Kooperation zwischen Aufnahme- und Entsendelandern aus der Sicht von CIM", in H. Korner and U. Mehrlander (eds.) Die "neue" Auslanderpolitik in Europa - Erfahrungen in den Aufnahme- und Entsendelandern (Bonn, Forschungsinstitut der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, 1986), pp. 251-256. [0351W] - 99 - WE Munzenmaier, W., Walter, I. "Auslandische Haushalte in Baden-Wiirttemberg - Riickkehrabsichten, Familiennachzug und Integration", Zeitschrift fur Bevolkerungswissenschaft, vol. 9, No. 4 (1983), pp. 487-496. Results are presented from a 1981 survey conducted by the Statistical Office of Baden-Wiirttemberg as a supplement to the 1981 micro-census of the Federal Republic of Germany. The survey focused on the length of stay and the intentions of the heads of foreign households to return to their home countries. The findings indicate that economic motivations are the primary factor determining intentions to stay or return. It is also found that between 1978 and 1981, there was an increasing trend toward the reunification of migrant families in the Federal Republic of Germany. The political significance of the results is considered. LA* Murillo Castani, G. "Effects of emigration and return on sending countries: the case of Colombia", International Social Science Journalf vol. 36, part 3, No. 101 (Paris, 1984), pp. 453-467. The effect of labour emigration and return on the economy and quality of life in Colombia is discussed. WE Musillo, I. Retour et emploi des migrants dans le Mezzogiorao; enauete sur un echantillon de migrants Italiens (Geneve, ILO, mars 1981; mimeographed World Employment Programme research working paper; restricted). Working paper on a comparative analysis of two surveys (1969-70 and 1979-80) of return migration and employment in the Mezzogiorno regional area of Italy. Studies reasons for return of Italian migrant workers (free circulation in EEC countries, end of the migration wave, etc.) and data available on labour market re-entry, and presents research results detailing age, marital status, educational level, motivations, unemployment. WE* Muus, P.J. Terugkeren of blilven - een onderzoek onder Turkse werknemers van het bedrijf Thomas sen en Driiver-Verblifa NV naar aanleiding van het instellen van een vertrekpremie (Amsterdam, Instituut voor Sociale Geografie, University of Amsterdam, 1986), 37 p. NC* Myers, G.C. and Masnick, G. "The migration experience of New York Puerto Ricans: a perspective on return", International Migration Reviewf vol. 2, No. 2 (1968), pp. 80-90 A sample of 234 Puerto Rican migrants was interviewed on the lower east side of Manhattan in order to determine their attitudes to returning to Puerto Rico. Overall, 78 thought that they would eventually return, including 44 within 5 years and 10 within one year. Those wanting to return say that this is because of 'pull' factors from Puerto Rico rather than 'push' factors from New York; this is supported by contrasting migrant scores of 10 'desirable traits* of the two places. Prospective return movers have made more trips back home than the 'stayers'. The prospective returnee also associates more frequently with persons from his home town than do the prospective stayers. WE Nacken, W. Evolution als Mittel der Politikberatung; Analyse eines. Modellprogramms zur Riickgliederung tiirkischer Gastarbelter (Niirnberg, Niirnberger Forschungsvereinigung e.V., 1976). [0351W] - 100 - AS* Naficy, H. "Brain drain": the case of the Iranian non-returnees", in H.W. Singer, Nicolas de Kun and Abbas Ordoobadi (eds.) International Development (New York, Oceana Publications, 1967), pp. 64-72. The drain of capable Iranians to the United States will continue as long as Iran sends potentially skilled young people to America for training and as long as the skill gap exists in the US. Nevertheless, the proportions of the drain should be reduced. Suggestions are made for bringing back non-returnees: cheap charter flights for regular visits home; visits to the US by prominent Iranians to talk to student groups and appraise them of the changing situation in Iran regarding jobs, etc.; a Bureau of Manpower Planning which will feed information on needs to students abroad. It would also help if returnees came back with more modestly realistic expectations. AF Naidja, D. La reinsertion des travailleurs immigres aleeriens dans l'economie algerienne. These de 3eme cycle en Sociologie (Universite de Paris VIII, 1978), 286 p. AS* Nair, P.R.6. Asian emigration to the Middle East: emigration from India (a report on the state of the art). Centre for Development Studies working paper No. 180 (Trivandrum, Centre for Development Studies, 1983), 97 p. A review of the available information on labour migration from India to the Middle East is presented. The review covers a range of sources, including research reports, government publications and press reports. Topics covered include the volume of this migration, migrant characteristics, the impact of this migration on the labour supply in India, the process of migration, terms and conditions of employment, wages, savings and remittances, return migration, and social, psychological and cultural problems associated with this migration. WE AF NCB-IMOS Office The experimental scheme of returnee development projects for foreign workers (Utrecht, Foundation Netherlands Centre Foreigners, 1980), 170 p. Report on the implementation of the Dutch Government's returnee development scheme from 1976 to 1980. WE Nestola Altarell, K. "Artigianato e rientro degli emigranti", Studi Emigrazione» No. 13 (ottobre 1968), pp. 594-598. WE Neto, F. "Sante et retour au pays natal Migration Sante. 36 (juillet 1983), pp. 7-13. WE Nicholson, B. "Return migration to a marginal area", Tidskrift for samfunforskningf vol. 12, No. 2 (1971), pp. 99-122. GE Nina, T. "The effect of economic incentives on return International Migration, vol. 13, No. 3 (1975), pp. 134-144. NC Nordheimer, J. "Puerto Ricans Accelerating Return to Crowded Homeland", The New York Times (May 10, 1978), p. A18. NC* Nutter, R. "Implications of return migration from the United Kingdom for urban employment in Kingston, Jamaica", in R. King (ed.) Return migration and regional economic problems (London, Sydney, Dover, 1985), pp. 198-212. [0351W] des migrants portugais", migration", - 101 - Data for this study were collected during a survey of manufacturing, retail and financial premises in the Kingston Metropolitan Area where 93 returnees were interviewed between June 1983 and January 1984. WE Oberdan Buratto, F. "L'integrazione dei rimpatri in Sardegna: Risultati di un indagina-pilota", Rassegna di servizio sociale, vol. 16, No. 4 (Otto-dic. 1977), pp. 77-96. GE OCDE WE OCDE Services for returning migrant workers; Yugoslav Report (Paris, OCDE, 1975), 105 p. Role of the employment agencies and services for Yugoslav returnees. Implementation of the Yugoslav policy for the return and reintegration of migrants. GE OECD "The OECD and return migration: note on the role and activity of an intergovernmental agency in the study of return migration", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 235-237. WE OECD Emigrant workers returning to their home country. International Management Seminar, Athens, 18-21 October 1966, final report by J.C. Reverdy (Paris, 1967), 101 p. Contains statistics and qualitative data on return, reintegration of the returnees, role and attitude of the employers' associations, and issues and new policy directions suggested by the Seminar. WE OECD Emigrant workers returning to their home country, International Management Seminar, Athens, 18-21 October 1966, supplement to the Final Report (Paris, 1967). WE OECD Work of the Technical Co-operation Committee on reinsertion and resettlement, Conference of National Experts (Paris, May 1986), 7 p. AF Office National d'Immigration, France Etude de 1'impact sur la situation de l'emploi des departs de travailleurs etrangers beneficiaires de l'aide au retour: Bilan pour douze departements (Paris, ONI, juin 1980), 10 p. GE* Ohndorf, W. "The various forms, reasons and motivations for return migration of persons who voluntarily decide to return to their countries of origin", International Migration, vol. XXIV, No. 1 (Geneva, 1986), pp. 213-217. AF 0NAM0, Algerie AF Oussou-Essuis, D. 192 pp. La chaine migratoire (Paris, OCDE, 1978), 59 p. Approche des problemes de la reinsertion (Alger, 1973). Les saisons seches (Paris, Ed. L'Harmattan, 1979), - 102 - WE Padiglione, V. "Emigrant! e communita di origine nel Mezzogiorno interno: note su un rapporto simbotico", Studi Emigrazione/Etudes Migrations,Vol. 13,no.41 (mars 1976). Consequences of emigration and return migration on the structural context of small communities of the "Mezzogiorno interno". WE Pagani, M. Contribution presented by the Employers' Organisation, ILO Tripartite Technical Seminar on Second-Generation Migrants, Lisbon, 1981 (Geneva, 1981, IL0-RER/79/001/Sem.I/15), 5 p. Conference paper presenting the Employers Organization view regarding second generation Italian migrants in Western Europe and countries and the presence of migrant workers in Italy. Comments on return migration, social integration, training. WE* Paine, S. Exporting workers; the Turkish case (London/New York, University of Cambridge, 1974), 227 p. This is a major and much respected study of labour migration from one of Europe's main suppliers of cheap labour: Turkey. There were 850,000 Turkish workers in Europe at the end of 1973; the ration of migrant workers to indigenous was about 1 in 16. The outflow has fluctuated in response to expansion and recession in receiving countries. No accurate figures on return migration are available but it is estimated at 20-25,000 per year during 1965-73, a fairly low figure. Many returnees have no intention of staying in Turkey for more than a few months. This book gives a good description of the highly organised nature of Turkish emigration to the Federal Republic of Germany, the main destination country. Paine devotes a good deal of attention to return migration. From two surveys which had been carried out by 1974, it appears that the chief reason for return was family motives. Only 3% returned because of unemployment in the Federal Republic of Germany. Other reasons for going back to Turkey were failure to adapt to foreign conditions, unhappiness or sickness whilst abroad, passport difficulties and recall for military service. Returnees were highly critical of conditions at home; it was hard for them to find employment. Almost half went back to the same occupation as prior to departure. Many returnee businesses have failed. There was little enthusiasm for co-operative ventures, either agricultural or industrial. Few were able to use skills acquired abroad. The pattern of participation in workers' associations was as follows: 24% belonged before emigration, 53% while abroad and 42% on return. Most of the money saved abroad went on a new house and the purchase of consumer durables. Relying on a policy of exploiting workers entails a nationalscale risk. Inasmuch as the poorest sections of the Turkish population are excluded from migration by the selection process, migration increases inequality in Turkish society. The book is concluded by an excellent annotated bibliography and by appendices on Turkish migration statistics and the State Planning Office's 1971 Survey on migrant workers who had returned to Turkey. WE Paiva, A. "Balanco da investigacao sobre retorno e reintegragao de emigrantes: consequencias para uma politica em Portugal", Conferencia sobre retorno e reintegracao dos emigrantes (Lisboa, Instituto de Estudos para o Desenvolvimento, June 1984), 8 p. WE* Palmer, R. "The Italians: patterns of migration to London", in Between Two Cultures: Migrants and Minorities in Britain, ed. by J.L. Watson (Oxford, Basil Blackwell, 1977), pp. 242-268. - 103 - This paper focuses on the build-up of the Italian ethnic group in London, based on fieldwork in central London and in a village in Emilia. The key to this Emilian link is the catering trade, a niche exploited by village Emilians very profitably. The final section of the chapter looks at the repatriation process. Italian statistics report a return rate of at least 50% for Italian emigrants. Palmer finds that the returnees are regarded as a distinct 'moral community' by the non-emigrant villagers. Returnees are reviled; those who have not enriched themselves are regarded as failures. Many therefore return to settle outside the home parish, perhaps in a local town or on the Adriatic Coast. One group has settled in Piacenza, on housing plots bought up from an earlier returnee from Britain. In the village, non-emigrants are reluctant to sell to returnees. • • • o WE* Palmer, R. "Process of estrangement and disengagement in an Italian emigrant community", New Communityf vol. 8, No. 3 (1980), pp. 277-287. This delightfully written paper looks at the processes of "estrangement" and "disengagement" whereby migrants on the road to assimilation in the host society experience rejection by their sending community. In this case-study the sending community is a village in Emilia (Italy) and the migrants are those who have gone to England. The article takes the form of a descriptive and often amusing account of migrant behaviour on return visits to the village. Most villagers in England return once a year for the summer. But because return visits are institutionalised - migrants out to impress and on their best behaviour, non-migrants with time on their hands in the agricultural off-season - they both have an idealised view of each other which leads the village ultimately to reject the Inglesif a process given impetus by the occasionally errant behaviour of visiting second-generation sons of emigrants. Permanent returnees, most of whom have experience of the catering trade in London, might want to set up restaurants, hotels etc. in the village but villagers refuse to sell them land or property, afraid that rich returnees will take the place over. So returnees tend to settle outside the village via a process of "chain repatriation". WE* Panayotakopoulou, E. "Specific problems of migrant women returning to the country of origin, particularly as regards employment and social services", International Migration, Vol. 19, No. 1-2 (1981), pp. 219-224. Written largely in the Greek context. Repatriation started in 1973/4 but so far only economic aspects have been studied. The more specific and personal problems of female return migration have been ignored. Return is accompanied by high expectations, partly due to pleasant memories of Christmas and summer holidays spent back home. Reality is disappointment when confronted with many difficulties. Absence has alienated returnees from the Greek scene. When return is followed by internal migration to a city further adjustment problems occur. Greek female returnees have no insurance cover, they have difficulty in getting jobs because of their sex, age and generally poor education, and they have poor knowledge of local social services. WE* Papademetriou, D.G. "Greece", in R.E. Krane (ed.) International Labor Migration in Europe (New York, Praeger, 1979). Analysis of the causes and patterns of Greek internal migration, emigration and return, with special reference to regional deficiencies produced by emigration. [0352W] - 104 - WE Papademetriou, D.G. Emigration and return in the mediterranean littoral: conceptualr research and policy agendas (Washington, Center for Migration Studies, 1981). The political economy of international migration and the components of emigration research. Analysis of the assumptions on the relation between skill acquisitions abroad and the socio-economic reintegration of the returnees. WE Papademetriou, D.G. "Return in the mediterranean littoral: Policy agendas", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 259-267. Examines the utilization of remitted and transferred savings in Mediterranean countries of return, and assesses occupational skill and the socio-economic re-integration of the returnees. WE* Papantoniou-Frangoulis, M. Impact of economic conditions on return migration - the Greek experience (Athens, Reintegration Centre for returning migrants, 1983), 11 p. Discusses various economic and non-economic factors influencing emigration and return migration in Greece in the light of the assistance provided by the Reintegration Centre for Returning Migrants. WE* Papantiniou-Frangoulis, M. Social problems of the reintegration of Greek returnees from Germany, with particular consideration to second generation problems (Athens, Reintegration Centre for Returning Migrants, 1983), 7 p. Discusses the three main types of problems faced by returning secondgeneration migrants: social integration, school integration, problems of professional qualification and professional integration. WE Papantoniou-Frangoulis, M. "Problems of return migration to Greece", Conferencia sobre retorno e reintegracao dos emigrantes (Lisboa, Instituto de estudos para o desenvolvimento, June 1984), 9 p. Factors influencing return migration to Greece and analysis of the return of second generation migrants. Existing measures and proposals concerning the re-integration of Greek returnees. WE* Papantoniou-Frangoulis, M. Problems of return migration and reintegration in Greece (Athens, Reintegration Centre for Returning Migrants, 1984), 15 p. This paper embraces various social and economic aspects of return migration: factors influencing repatriation, the socio-economic problems faced upon return and second-generation migrants. WE* Papantoniou, A.K. "Gastarbeiterpolitik und Remigration - Beispiel Griechenland" in H. Kbrner and U. Mehrlander (eds.) Die "neue" Auslanderpolitik in Europa - Erfahrungen in den Aufnahme- und Entsendelandern (Bonn, Forschungsinstitut der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, 1986), pp. 159-180. WE Papastavro, M. Greek migration and governmental policy. International Conference on Greek Expatriate Nationals (Athens, July 1985), 22 p. (in Greek). This paper discusses various socio-economic problems faced by returning migrants, and analyses the legislative measures adopted by the Greek Government to assist returnees. [0352W] - 105 - WE Parodi, L. "L'emigrato ritorna e impazzisce: una realta dolorosa e poco nota della Sardegna di oggi", Famielia Cristiana,, 17 (april 1978), pp. 42-47. Mental diseases of returning migrants In the Sardegna region. WE Pascual, A. El retorno de los emlgrantes; Confllcto (Barcelona, Nova Terra, 1970). WE Passera, A.L. "II reinserimento soclale di ragazzi emigrati di ritorno in un'area interna della Calabria", Rassegna di Servizio Sociale. Vol. 21, No. 2 (aprile-giugno 1982), pp. 8-27. Social reintegration of young returnees in Calabria. AS* Patel, N. "A passage from India", Societyf Vol. 9, No. 6 (1972), pp. 25-29, 60-63. A personal, anecdotal but thoroughly fascinating article in which Patel describes the migration and return experiences of himself, his family and his co-villagers. The village is in Gujarat and its men have emigrated to, and returned from, countries in many parts of the world - East Africa, Panama, New Zealand, Britain and many more. Patel describes the early returnees and the effect they had on the village, even though many had performed menial jobs abroad. Work that at home would be defined as below the dignity of the caste - street hawking, cleaning, domestic servant etc. - was exempt from criticism if on his return home the pioneer impressed his friends and relatives by his wealth and conspicuous consumption. Patel describes the new houses, etiquettes and standards of hygiene introduced by returnees. His father came back and ate meat, drank alcohol and mixed with "untouchables" - revolutionary social behaviour in his caste-ridden village. The role of education is also described, also the changing pattern of destinations, with Britain now dominant. In Britain, however, a new emigrant society is being formed, which has different implications for return migration. NC* Patterson, H.O. "West Indian migrants returning home: some observations", Race, vol. 10, no. 1 (1968), pp. 69-77. An impressionistic study based on informal talks with returning migrants on board a boat from Britain bound for Jamaica. Having emigrated for employment reasons, to better themselves, to save money or to join expatriate relatives, the return migrants are not a uniform group. They fall into two distinct age groups: 20-30 and 40-45, respective mean absences being about 3 and 9 years. Most migrants came originally from rural areas and were of lowly socio-economic status. Reasons given for return included the British climate, dislike of the UK, to see what Jamaica had to offer, to re-emigrate to a better place such as the US, to set up a business in Jamaica, or family reasons. All had sent remittances back home and most valued their experience in the UK. NC* Pavalko, R.M. "Talent migration: Canadian students in the United States", International Review of Education, vol. 14, No. 3 (1968), pp. 300-324. This paper looks at Canadian undergratuate and graduate students in the US, of whom there were 9,253 in the 1964/65 academic year. These students represent an important addition to Canada's high level manpower - if they return. A postal survey to certain American universities yielded 1,635 usable replies. To a question on reasons for going abroad 59% replied that it was because of the more ready availability of the particular subject. 30% planned to stay in the US, 60% planned to return and 10% were undecided. o Integraclon? - 106 - WE* Pekin, H. "Placement assistance to returning migrants and other type of assistance, including reception and accommodation", International Migration, vol. 14, No. 1/2 (1976), pp. 105-119. An initial distinction is made between voluntary, individual, spontaneous returns and compulsory, large-scale mass return movements. The latter are those provoked by recessions as in 1967 and 1973. A number of problems are related to return migration. The situation is very difficult for families with children who do not speak their mother tongue fluently. Employment problems are severe for returnees; only a small proportion can go into industry. Placement assistance is discussed in the country of foreign residence, at the frontier, and in the home country. Broaderscale job possibilities need to be created. Other forms of assistance to returnees include return travel subsidies, reception help and accommodation on arrival, protection of acquired social security rights, pension schemes etc. GE* Pekin, H. "Measures to facilitate the reintegration of returning migrants into their countries of origin", International Migrationf Vol. XXIV, No.l (Geneva, 1986), pp. 163-178. WE Pellegrini, A.M. Immigrants return (New York, The Macmillan Company, 1953), 269 p. Social reintegration of Italian emigrants returning from the United States. WE* Penninx, R., Van Renselaar, H. A fortune in small change. A study of migrant workers' attempts to invest savings productively through .joint stock corporations and village development co-operatives in Turkey (The Hague, 1978). This study is carried out under the auspices of the REMPLOD project (Reintegration of Emigrant Manpower and the Promotion of Local Opportunities for Development) sponsored by the Netherlands Universities Foundation for International Co-operation. The title of this book renders succinctly how little the potential for development represented by migrants' earnings has in fact been realised, and how negligibly the social and economic structure of underdeveloped regions has been affected by 20 years of labour migration from Turkey. The book looks critically and exhaustively at the unique German-Turkish experience of stimulating home country local development by channelling migrant savings to small and medium scale local industrial and other enterprises. Although the study is to do with migrant savings rather than actual return, problems and patterns of return migration are discussed from time to time. WE Perotti, A. "L'inserimento dell'emigrato nel momento economico e socio-culturale dei programmi di sviluppo regionale. Appunti e proposte", Studi Emigrazione. No. 7 (ottobre 1966), pp. 51-60. Integration of returning migrants in Italy in connection with the economic and socio-cultural regional development. WE Peter, K. "Remigrants from the underdeveloped areas of emigrant society and the problems of their reintegration", American Sociological Association Annual Meeting (San Francisco, Sept. 4-8, 1978.) Reintegration policy in economically less developed areas of an emigrant society in connection with social development. The research is centered on a less developed area of Slovenia in Yugoslavia. A structural model is used to find changes in the social status of remigrants in the immigrant society and their original society. [0352W] - 107 - WE* NC Philpott, S.B. "Remittance obligations, social networks and choice among Monserratian immigrants in Britain", Man, vol. 3 (1968), pp. 465-476. This study is based on fieldwork among Monserratian migrants aged 15-44 years, both at home and in Britain. Remittances have replaced cotton as the island's main money earner. Remittance payments are influenced by social commitments. They are used for gifts, display of affluence, the need to pay for others to migrate, and the support of children left behind. Continued remittance payments reflect the desire to receive approbation from family and friends and to keep in with kin prior to return. Remittance payments do decline over time, however. The paper gives an interesting insight into the role of remittances, but lacks hard data on payments. NC* Philpott, S.B. "The implications of migration for sending societies: some theoretical considerations", in Robert F. Spencer (ed.) Migration and Anthropology (Seattle, University of Washington Press for the American Ethnological Society, 1970), pp. 9-20. This paper focuses particularly on the 'migration ideology' backed up by reference to Philpott's work on Monserratian migration. Monserratians in Britain share the same ideology and notions of a moral obligation to the home community which includes remittance payments and an eventual return. Even if only 20% will return (Philpott's estimate) most talk and act as if they will. Return migrants have the effect of altering the material culture of their home villages (housing, flush toilets, refigrerators, etc.), but produce little economic innovation. NC* Philpott, S.B. West Indian Migration: the Monserrat Casef (London, Athlone Press, London School of Economics Monograph on Social Anthropology, No. 47, 1973) 210 p. This study looks at Monserratian migration largely in terms of its background in the island and effects on the home society, although parts are concerned with the community in London. Makes frequent reference to the impact of remittances, less so return migration. Most of the material on remittances and return migration is contained in more succinct form in Philpott's 1968 article which is largely drawn from chapter 7 of this monograph. NC* Philpott, S.B. "The Monserratians: migration dependency and the maintenance of island ties in England", in James L. Watson (ed.) Between two cultures: Migrants and minorities in Britain (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1977), pp. 90-119. Monserrat has the highest rate of emigration from any West Indian territory, largely due to the collapse of cotton exports in 1952. Expectations to return vary according to class. In the upper class, emigration is viewed as a permanent or long-term move. Lower class workers perceive it as more temporary, at least initially. Their behaviour is influenced by remittance ties, care of their children and an ambition to return home to a higher status. Such prestige derives partly from migration as a socially valued experience and partly from accumulated wealth. Yet returnees produce very little social or economic innovation, largely because the potential for such innovation on a small island is limited. Returnees cannot return to the ordinary labouring jobs they did before emigrating without loss of new-found status. Capital investments to establish an independent position tend to be culturally defined: rum shops, vans, buses, cattle. As the demand for these services is less than the supply, many returnees are forced to re-emigrate. [0352W] - 108 - WE Pinilla de las Casas, E. "Les travailleurs emigres retournant dans leur pays", Sociologie du Travail, Vol. 10, No.4 (oct.-dec. 1968), pp. 458-459. GE* Piore, M.M. Birds of passage; Migrant labour and industrial societies (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1979), 229 p. An important study of labour migration, written from a critical perspective. The book contains many passages and sections on return migration. Return migration is mostly seen by Piore in a negative light which in fact questions the whole utility of the migration phenomenon. Conventional wisdom has it that returnees make two principal contributions to the development process of the home area. First migrant remittances are thought of as being a channel for acquiring critically needed foreign exchange. Second, the migrants themselves are supposed to develop industrial skills which can be usefully deployed in the country of origin. In reality the beneficial effects of these contributions are rather elusive. Returnees often spend savings and remittances on imported luxuries, or the money is held abroad; little is allocated to local development projects. Nor have returnees been a significant source of industrial skills, Piore argues. The most skilled tend not to return. Those who do return are loath to enter in their home country the kinds of jobs they did abroad. Returnees are also unwilling to recommence agricultural work. Their attitudes degrade such work and also foster the rejection traditional farming by non-migrants. In the extreme, return migration kills off traditional agriculture or leads to rural jobs being performed by new migrants from other, less developed countries. Temporary migration creates a sharp distinction between work on the one hand and social identity on the other. Social identity is rooted in the place of origin - the home, the village, the community. Work abroad is divorced from this in that it is regarded as purely instrumental as a means to higher economic status. Income earned abroad, by whatever menial, degraded means, enables upward status at home. In this sense the migrant is an 'economic man' par excellence; work is asocial. Several anecdotes express this, e.g. a Mexican returnee: "I work there (in the USA), then at home I am king". Or a Puerto Rican: "If I'm going to do that kind of work, I'd rather do it over there (USA); then I can come home and be myself". This line of argument also opposes the conventional view that successful migrants settle abroad and failures return. In terms of the migrant's self-perception it is the succesful ones who return with their nest-egg; the failures stay abroad, still desperately saving. Piore also criticises the terms first, second, third generation etc. Children who migrate before adolescence seem to adopt the culture of the destination and therefore reintegrate with difficulty upon return. Post-adolescent migrants never shake off their ethnic origins; their return is easier. AS* Piatt, J.B. "Emigration of scholars and the development of Taiwan", Development Digest, vol. 4, No. 1 (1966), pp. 42-46. This paper discusses the problem of the persistent loss of qualified people and a proposed scheme to redress this balance of brain loss. At present almost all scientists and graduates leave Taiwan - about 2,000 per year. Only 5% return. This is mainly due to low financial returns and lack of research opportunities, equipment, etc. This loss will have severe detrimental consequences on Taiwan's future educational standards. To prevent this, it is proposed to set up 5 centres for research and graduate study in Taiwan. These will offer advantageous research posts and facilities for a few returnees who will be complemented by a [0352W] - 109 - programme of visiting researchers from the US. Salaries will not be as high as in the US but by providing a comfortable living standard it is hoped to go some way towards stemming the continual outflow of qualified people. AF Plotnicov, L. "Going home again - Nigerians, the dream is unfulfilled", Transaction, 3 (117), pp. 18-22. WE Poinard, M. Rapport sur les retours au Portugal (Paris, OECD, 1971), 87 p. The concept of return migration and public opinion. Statistical data on the return migration from France and the Federal Republic of Germany; the role of the returnees in the Portuguese economy. WE Poinard, M. "Le million des immigres. Analyse de l'utilisation de l'aide au retour par les travailleurs portugais en France", Revue Geographique des Pyrenees et du Sud-Ouest" (oct. 1979), pp. 511-539. WE Poinard, M. Retour des travailleurs portugais. Migrations et Societes, 5 (Paris, documentation francaise, 1979), 141 p. Monograph on the return migration of Portuguese migrant workers from France. Reviews current economic conditions, labour market situation and migration policy of Portugal, presents survey data covering the migrants' distribution by age group, family structure and occupational qualifications, and examines employment opportunities and social integration of returning workers. WE Poinard, M. "Le retour de travailleurs migrants au Portugal", Migration Etudes. 22 (Mai 1979), 19 p. LA Poitras, G. Return migration from the United States to Costa Rica and El Salvador (San Antonio, Border Research Institute, Trinity University 1980), 34 p. Describes the personal and demographic characteristics of Costa Rican and Salvadorian samples of return migrants to study the pattern of migration to the United States and to examine the characteristics of the return to the home countries. LA Poitras, G. The US experience of return migrants from Costa Rica and El Salvador (San Antonio, Tex., Trinity University Research Institute, 1980), 140 p. WE Polizos, N.J. Consequences des retours en grece des emigrants (Paris, OECD, 1970), 43 p. Technical and professional training of emigrants. Effects of the returnees on the Greek labour market. WE* Portero, B. "Cooperatives para el retorno", Carta de Espanar No. 292 (abril 1984), pp. 14-20. WE Portugal Contribution presentee par le Gouvernementf IL0 Tripartite Technical Seminar on Second-Generation Migrants, Granada, 1982, (Geneve 1982, IL0-RER/79/001/SEM.II/15.A), 29 p. Conference paper on educational policy and social policy in Portugal regarding second generation Portuguese migrant (immigrant) youth in Western Europe. Covers migrant education and language teaching, role of migrant associations, vocational training, cultural factor identity and return migration. [0352W] - 110 - WE* Poschl, A. and Schmuck, P. Die Riickkehr - Ende elner Illusion. Tiirkische Gastarbeiterfamilien in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland und die Probleme ihrer Riickkehr in die Tiirkei (Munich, Deutsches Jugend Institut, Materialien zur Auslanderarbeit, 1984). WE* Presidenza Consiglio Ministri Comitato Interministeriale per l'Emigrazione Disposizioni e tendenze normative per la formazione degli emigrati (Rome, Istituto Poligrafico e Zecca dello Stato, 1980), 197 p. Legislative information at European (EEC), national and regional levels on educational and professional training of migrants, including for return. AS* Price, C. "Australian migration: settler gain and loss", in J. Zubrzycki, Enquiry into the Departure of Settlers from Australia (Canberra, Australian Government Publishing Service, 1973), pp. 25-34. Examines the question of settler loss in Australia, pointing out that loss is often tempered by 'second-timers' - returnees from Australia who subsequently come back again. Estimates based on cohort loss, period loss and a deficit model all give an 'attract-hold' loss ratio of about 25% for 1965-72, but figures vary between nationality. Leaving aside the early post-war settlers, the loss rates after 10 years of settlement work out at 30% for British, Italian and Maltese settlers, 40% for Dutch and German, and about 20-25% for Greeks and Yugoslavs. WE , Puigjaner, J.M., et al. La desemigracion Documentacion social 3, 1974). (Madrid, Fundacion Foessa, WE Radlovic, 0. "Normativeno regularanje privremenog zaposl avanja jugoslavenskih gradjana u inozemstvu", Rasprave o migraci.iamaf No. 3, 41 p. AF* Read, M. "Migrant labour in Africa and its effects on tribal life", International Labour Reviewr vol. 45, No. 6 (1942), pp. 605-631. In this interesting early study of African migrant labour Read maintains that the outstanding sociological aspect of the African labour market is the phenomenon of the 'temporarily urbanised' migrant who maintains strong links with his village of origin. Life in the villages changes as men leave and return, and others leave. This paper, based on extensive field surveys in Nyasaland, examines the nature of these changes taking place. The author shows that the popular conception of the African migrant worker returning to his village with only a box of trashy trade goods and after giving them away right and left sinking back easily into his old village ways, is very far from the truth. WE Rellini, G.P. Les politiques du retour (Clermont-Ferrand, Faculte de Droit et de Science Politique, 1978). Action programme for return migration policies in Europe. Based on the Council of Europe and 0ECD schemes. WE Reyneri, E., Barone, C , Cacciola, R. Emigrazione meridionale nelle zone d'esodo (Catania, Universita di Catania, Facolta di Scienze Politiche, 1976), 3 volumes Report on emigration from agricultural areas and rural communities of Sicily 1945. Presents the results of a questionnaire/survey of the demographic characteristics, marital status, educational level, motivations and attitudes of migrant workers, the economic structure of [0352W] - Ill emigration areas, the geographic distribution and duration of international and internal migration, various aspects of return migration, changes in political participation of return migrants. WE Reyneri, E., and Mughini, C. "Return migration and sending areas: from the myth of development to the reality of stagnation", in The Politics of Return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 31-36. Explains the various "myths" on the benefits of return migration for the country of origin, through the example of return migration situation in Southern Italy. WE Reyneri, E., Scuderi, M. and Sineri, G. Emierazlone di ritorno e professionalita. Un indagine sulla Sicilia Centrale (Catania, 1979). WE* Reyneri, E. "Emigration and sending area as a subsidized system in Sicily", Mediterranean Studiesf vol. 2, No. 1 (1980), pp. 88-113. This important article reports the results of a major research project on the effects of emigration and of return migration in central Sicily; 15 settlements, peasant or former mining villages, were sampled and 594 interviews with members of migrant households carried out. Some of the results, particularly as they effect return migration, can be set out as follows. The older migrants are when they leave Sicily, the more likely they are to return after a short time. This is because of their greater difficulties in adapting to a changed way of life. Many migrants, however, have a migratory cycle, from departure to return, over 10 years. A critical point seems to exist at 6-7 years. Another break occurs at 15 years when many migrants start to think of their stay abroad as permanent. Commuting migrants, who alternate periods at home and abroad, disappear after this time. Various reasons for return are given: 62% are strictly personal and the economic crisis seems only to play a minor part. About 60% intended to remain at home, 30% intended re-emigration, and 10% were undecided. Young adults are the most prone to re-emigrate. The relationships between occupations before departure, abroad and since return are explored. There are interesting data on family budgets of returnees and on remittances, which reach their highest levels after 10-14 years of absence, falling thereafter as migrants come to realise they may be abroad permanently. The sending area exists as a subsidised economic system. Remittances do not support the capitalisation of development initiatives but are spent in the purchase of houses, goods and services which do not promote increased productivity locally. In conclusion, the sending areas experience waste of capital and fragmentation of labour, both of which are obstacles to economic progress. WE* Rhoades, R.E. "Intra-European migration and development in Mediterranean Basin", Current Anthropology, vol. 18, No. 3 (Sept. 1977), pp. 539-540. Fieldwork was carried out by Rhoades in southern Spain to test, at a regional level, the validity of two theoretical propositions on return migration: (1) that migrants from rural areas who have worked in foreign industry bring back modern work habits and industrial skills when they return; and (2) that foreign earnings are utilised to establish return-migrant businesses which revitalise the rural sector. Generally these hypotheses were not upheld. Although there are variations in the pattern of responses by 133 interviewed returnees (by age, size of settlement etc.), few skills were acquired and most of the investment was in housing, furniture, consumer durables and precarious businesses like » * r [0352W] - 112 - shops and bars. In conclusion, the developmental effects of intraEuropean migration on southern Spain are insignificant, if not actually negative; the benefits exist in the minds of industrialists and government officials, not in the reality of the economic structure of the region. WE* Rhoades, R.E. "Intra-European return migration and rural development: lessons from the Spanish case", Human Organization, vol.37 (Summer 1978), pp. 146-147. Precise knowledge of return migration is now urgently needed in Mediterranean Europe. The debate on the 'ideological balance-sheet'' of European labour migration - whether migration is developing or exploiting sending countries - can only be accurately accounted by analysing what happens to returnees. Rhoades looks at villages in Andalusia where he interviewed 133 returnees from the Federal Republic of Germany. Three types of return situation emerged. Young, single migrants free of family ties tend to be mobile and return to the village prior to re-migrating to other parts of Spain. Young married migrants also return to the village temporarily, moving on to urban or coastal locations. Older marrieds return to the village permanently, settling back to live off investments. This third category is numerically the most important, and is the main group treated in the paper. Numerous data on remittances and returnee investment are given. Investments go in two main directions: housing and home furnishings; and small-scale businesses. There are interesting descriptive passages on returnee lifestyles, home furnishings and social attitudes. Overall, the rural development impact is cosmetic rather than positive. WE* Rhoades, R.E. "Towards an anthropology of return migration", Papers in Anthropology, vol. 20, No. 1 (Spring 1979). An introduction to a special issue of Papers in Anthropology on return migration, edited by Rhoades. The journal contains papers by Brettell, Rubenstein, Swanson, Rhoades, Bennett, McArthur, Eikaas, McLane, Griffiths, Carpenter, Gmelch and Deleney, Gmelch and Rhoades and Wiest. In this introduction Rhoades advances reasons why return migration has been a neglected field of study amongst anthropologists and outlines the different approaches contained in the papers which follow. WE* Rhoades, R.E. "From caves to main street: return migration and the transformation of a Spanish village", Papers in Anthropology. Vol. 20, No. 1 (1979), pp. 57-74. Alcudia de Guadix, a village in southern Spain studied by Rhoades, is typical of many other Mediterranean villages which have become special "migrant suburbs" of industrial cities in the Federal Republic of Germany. In Alcudia a new district - el centro aleman - has been built in recent years along the main road. This is where the returnees from the Federal Republic have built their new houses and opened their new businesses. No longer do they live in the caves of the old village centre. This paper primarily looks at the physical alterations in the rural sector which have been brought about by return migration. Most migrant Alcudians go to the German town of Neuss where at one time 128 of them worked in the same factory. Rhoades sampled 118 returnees in the village. Alcudia is not typical of villages in the region, being bigger, richer and more of a service centre, even before migration. Because of its 'German connection' it has become even more rich when compared to surrounding villages which have migratory links elsewhere (Barcelona, France, Switzerland). The main physical impact of return migration is new [0352W] - 113 - housing. This has led to inflated property prices. Many new houses combine businesses such as bars, shops, bakeries, mechanical workshops. The German flavour of house furnishings is very strong. Returnee investments have led to a staggering growth of small-scale businesses. Yet the population continues to decline. Competition increases and some returnee enterprises fail. Other returnees invest in farming, buying agricultural land and farm machinery. Yet the agricultural economy remains depressed, and returnees are not particularly innovative. They see security in land. Politically, returnees are conservative or moderate. Migration does not foster leftist tendencies. Outward manifestations of return migration exhibit facets of change and development. But these changes are superficial and entirely dependent upon external agents. The village has experienced a facelifting but continued prosperity is by no means guaranteed. Returnees' savings and investments will not last the rest of their lives. Many will experience a declining standard of living; some may have to re-emigrate. The future of returnees' children is equally uncertain. WE* Rhoades, R. "European cyclical migration and economic development. The case of Southern Spain. The return of urban migrants to their rural homes and their impact there", in G. Gmelch, W.P. Zenner, eds. Urban Life; Readings in Urban Anthropology, (New York, St. Martin's Press, 1980). pp. 110-119. Some scholars, who have argued that migration is beneficial to both the host and donor societies, claim that return migration has beneficial effects on the migrants' rural homelands. First workers may bring back valuable work skills and industrial experience that will upgrade the home labour force. Second, the migrants' foreign earnings may be used to establish innovative businesses, co-operatives and farms that will contribute to the revitalisation of the rural homeland. In this ethnographic case study of a southern Spanish village, Rhoades raises serious doubts about these mechanisms. His argument is hung around individual biographies of migrants who are divided into three categories: failures (los fracasados), swallows (los golondrinas) and Germans (los alemanes). Overall, return migration's contribution to village economic development is little more than skin-deep. GE Ribeiro, A.G. "Le retour pathologique du migrant", in Psychopathology of the Transplantation of Migrants (Strasbourg, European Science Foundation, 1983) pp. 61-64. NC Richardson, B.C. "The origins and continuity of return migration in the Leeward Caribbean", paper presented at the Fifth Annual Conference of the Caribbean Studies Association, Curacao, Netherlands Antilles, May 7-11, 1980, 8 p. Examines the migratory movements of people from the Eastern Caribbean as being fundamental to their livelihoods. Most information concerns the islands of St. Kitts and Nevis but many conclusions can be extended to the other Caribbean islands. WE* Richardson, A. "A shipboard study of some British-born immigrants returning to the United Kingdom from Australia", International Migration. vol. 6, No. 4 (1968), pp. 221-238. Explores the psycho-social determinants of return migration amongst a small sample of British born male, married, skilled manual workers; the main contrast investigated is the difference between those who had decided to resettle permanently in the UK and those who were undecided. [0352W] - 114 - The following differences were significant at the 5% level: undecided returnees were more anxious, were less unsettled in Australia, are more similar in outlook to comparable samples of Australian-born men, and mention more often parents, relatives and friends as the things they look forward to most in the UK; permanent returnees more often mentioned that they look forward to the following in the UK - economic security, better working conditions and better social services. WE NC Richmond, A.H. "Return migration from Canada to Britain", Population Studies, vol. 22, No. 2 (July 1968), pp. 263-271. Statistics of 36,514 migrants returning from Canada to Great Britain are compared with 195,383 immigrants entering Canada between 1956 and 1965. Other statistics on type of past migration and future migration intentions by sex and age are also discussed. WE* Richmond, A.H. "Demographic and family characteristics of British immigrants returning from Canada", International Migrationf vol. 4 No.l (1966), pp. 21-27. Tabulation and brief discussion of results of a survey of 427 British returnees from Canada. The main features of the tabulated data are as follows: women returnees were younger than men returnees, except for old widows; manual workers were more likely to be single; the existence of close relatives in Canada depresses the inclination to return; and similarly the existence of close relatives in Britain encourages return, often precipitated by a crisis such as illness. 30.5% of returnees intend to re-emigrate to Canada. GE Richmond, A.H. "Explaining return migration", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 269-275. Reviews the existing theories and typologies on migration issues. Includes voluntary and involuntary migration, immigrant adaptation and return migration. GE Rizzo, L. "La nouvelle politique de 1'immigration: le FAS et formation retour", Alphabetisation et Promotion, 90 (Janvier 1980), pp. 31-35. AS* Robinson, V. "Bridging the Gulf: the economic significance of South Asian migration to and from the Middle East", in R. King (ed.) Return migration and regional economic problems (London, Sydney, Dover, 1985), pp. 243-272. This study is concerned with recent labour migration from Bangladesh, India and Pakistan to the six Arab States which together form the Gulf Cooperation Council (Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates). It focuses on the economic significance of this movement for the sending societies, and the relative balance of advantages and disadvantages which accrues to those societies through emigration, remittances and return migration. » Rocca, G. "Cause e prospettive dei rimpatri", Internazionali. Vol. 2, No. 1-2 (1974), pp. 71-84. f WE WE Affari la Sociali Rocha-Trindade, M.B. "Caminhos para a reinsercao", Conferencia sobre retorno e reintegracao dos emigrantes (Lisboa, Instituto de Estudos para o Desenvolvimento, June 1984), 12 p. [0352W] - 115 WE* Rocha Trindade, M.B. "La sociologie des migrations au Portugal" in Current Sociologyr vol. 32, No. 2 (1984), pp. 175-198. Reviews selected literature on Portuguese migration, including return migration. WE Rodie, R. Workers abroad and their reintegration in the local economy under the five year development plan 1968-1972 (Turkey)f (OCDE, MS/M/503/273, mai 1968). GE* Rogers, R. "Incentives to return: patterns of policies and migrants' responses", in M.M. Kritz, C.B. Keely, S.M. Tomasi, eds. Global trends in migration: theory and research on international population movements (Staten Island, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1981),pp. 338-364. This chapter reviews and analyses several return incentive policies used or contemplated in various countries in different parts of the world. The policies fall under three headings: return-bonus schemes, reintegration projects and employment creation projects. Return bonus schemes are operated from the host country and incentives are financial. An evaluation of the French repatriation bonus is given. Similar schemes were discussed, but not implemented, by the Federal Republic of Germany and the Netherlands. Several examples of reintegration services, operated by origin countries, are mentioned, but more detailed data are given for return incentives offered by Colombia (to university graduates), by Algeria (to blue-collar workers) and by Israel (to all returnees, subject to certain criteria). The third category of policy, the use of migrants' savings for job creation in their home countries, is illustrated by reference to Dutch aid to returning migrants for private sector job creation, by Yugoslav schemes for integrating migrants in the socialist sector, and by the well-known Turkish workers' co-operatives. The general conclusion is that return incentives function mostly as extra aids to migrants who were returning in any case, or who intended to do so in the near future. The French, Colombian and Israeli experiences show that monetary incentives are not often decisive in inducing return. Long-term benefits such as attractive jobs and housing, are the most effective inducements. A useful comparative review of a little-researched aspect of return migration. GE Rogers, R. "Return migration in comparative perspective", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 277-299. Critical review of existing theories on migration issues. The author questions the validity of the current literature on the failure of returning migrants to contribute to their home countries' economic development, and describes the inadequacy of the analysis, the sampling and the evaluation criteria of such studies. WE* Roodjuin, J. "On things that change and things that don't change in the villages of Terra di Lavoro, Caserta, Italy", Mediterranean Studies, vol. 2, No. 1 (1980), pp. 114-140. This is basically a study in changing patterns of "clientelismo", a form of patronage much studied by anthropologists, especially those specialising in Italy. One of the hypotheses examined in this paper is that returning migrants to southern Italy might be an 'avant-garde' bringing in their experiences of modern forms of organisation in foreign countries; in this way they would form pressures for horizontal social organisations - political parties, class based social groups etc. - which would cut across traditional vertical patron-client chains. On the other [0352W] - 116 - hand, it is also acknowledged by Roodjuin that return migration which has gathered pace since late 1973, will create more pressures on limited resources so that the original mechanism for "clientelismo" may be intensified. These notions are examined by means of anthropological fieldwork in two villages inland of Naples. One village is in the rich plain, the other in poor mountain country. In both villages no great decline in clientelism could be observed, but the more sophisticated way in which people manipulate clientelistic relationships could be a prelude to the disappearance of this form of patronage. WE Rogue Amaro, R. "Linhas de investigacao possiveis sobre o regresso dos emigrantes", Conferencia sobre retorno e reintegracao dos emigrantes (Lisboa, Instituto de Estudos para o Desenvolvimento, June 1984), 4 p. The document looks at the perspectives of return migration to Portugal, the attitudes of local population toward the return of Portuguese emigrants, the differences in the motivations of returnees by sex, and the economic and political measures that would harmonize the return of Portuguese emigrants with the regional development. WE* Rose, A.M. Migrants in Europe; Problems of Acceptance and Adjustment. (Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press, 1969), 194 p. The basic subject of this book is the integration of migrants into European urban society. Some highly original concepts and methods are proposed, but some of the techniques and data used are suspect or poorly explained. The book contains a section on the acceptance and adjustment of migrants who return to their home countries. Drawing mainly on OECD studies, the following generalisations are made about return migration. The main pushes to return are expulsion from the country of immigration as a result of laws restricting length of stay, poor housing, failure to adjust and lack of occupational mobility. The main pulls are improvement of job opportunities back home, family ties, retirement and accumulation of savings to invest in a house or small business. Young, unskilled, unmarried workers stay the shortest time abroad but also show greater propensity to re-emigrate. All emigrant countries favour the return of their emigrants, especially those with skills and capital. No immigration countries discourage return and some encourage it (Federal Republic of Germany, Switzerland, the Netherlands). Few returnees have acquired skills during their stay abroad, but many have learned modern work habits. GE* Rosenmiiller, C. "Riickkehr fbrdern", Bundesarbeitsblatt. No. 1 (1984), pp. 5-9. GE Rosoli, G. "L'emigrazione di ritorno: alia ricerca di una impostazione", Studi Emigrazione/Etudes Migrationsr vol. 14, No. 47 (ottobre 1977), pp. 235-246. Comparison with the most discussed issues and policies concerning return migration. GE* Round Table on Voluntary Repatriation. Voluntary Repatriation: A Background Study. Meeting convened by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in cooperation with the International Institute of Humanitarian Law (San Remo, July 16-19, 1985), 241 p. (Mimeo). This paper examines: 1) recent experience and practice concerning voluntary repatriation; 2) the principles and rules of international law which are relevant to voluntary repatriation and how international law can be developed to promote this solution; and 3) how voluntary repatriation can be promoted in practice. [0352W] - 117 - NC* Rubenstein, H. "The return ideology in West Indian migration", Papers in Anthropology, vol. 20, No. 1 (1979), pp. 21-38. Few studies have been made of return migration to the West Indies. This paper examines one aspect of return migration - the pattern of beliefs and expectations that migrants hold concerning their eventual return home - within the context of a village study on the island of St. Vincent. In this village 59% of the 213 resident adult males of over 30 years of age are returned migrants, from a variety of destinations both within the Caribbean (Trinidad, Aruba, Barbados, Cuba, etc.) and elsewhere (the US, England, etc.). The return migration orientation affects the behaviour of both the migrant abroad and those remaining behind in the sending unit. The mere idea of returning (as opposed to actual physical return which may or may not take place) has been instrumental in producing (1) affiliation with village peers in the destination society, (2) preference for marriage to fellow islanders, (3) a social and sentimental involvement with the home community and the household from which migration took place, (4) the sponsoring of the migration of kin and friends, (5) the remitting of money to relatives, and (6) the purchase of village housing and land. Although remittances have enhanced the lifestyle and wellbeing of recipients, they have tended to depress agricultural productivity and perpetuate migration ambitions of the young - an ambition many will not be able to fulfill. NC Rubenstein, H. "Return migration to the English-speaking Caribbean: Review and Commentary", in Return migration and remittances. Developing a Caribbean perspective, ed. by W.F. Stinner, K. de Albuquerque and Roy S. Bryce-Laporte, RUES occasional papers No. 3 (Washington D.C., 1982), pp. 3-34. Typology of the returning migrants and comparative analysis of intraregional return movements. Demographic and historical process and ideology of return migration. WE Runft, H. Ruckwanderung der auslandischen Arbeiter. Symposium Zweite Migranten-Generation, Centre Europeen culturel de Delphes, 1-3 oct. 1980. WE Saba, V., Frittella, A., Fratini, M. "Problem! dell'emigrazione", Affari Social! Internazionali, (Milano), vol. 7 No. 4 (1979), pp. 159-213. Compilation of articles on emigration problems, with particular reference to Italy. Surveys unemployment trends in EEC countries, immigration policies of Switzerland and the US, schooling and housing problems of migrant workers, migration policy as regards Italian return migration, regional applications of EEC instruments, international relations. WE Sacchetti, G.B. "II reinserimento dell'emigrato nella communita di partenza", L'Emigrazione Italiana in Europa negli Anni Sessanta. 19e reunion du Comite catholique pour les Migrations intra-europeennes (Alghero, 1968), pp. 117-132. AF Safir, T., Khelladi, M. "Strategies individuelles de retour", L'emigration maghrebine en Europe: Exploitation ou cooperation? (Alger, CREA, n.d.), pp. 429-444. AS* Saifullah Khan, V. "The Pakistanis: Mirpuri villagers at home and in Bradford", in James L. Watson (ed.) Between two cultures: migrants and minorities in Britain (Oxford, Basil Blackwell, 1977), pp. 57-89. - 118 - The material presented in this paper is based on research carried out on Mirpuri families in Bradford and on their relatives in villages in Mirpur district, Pakistan. Part of the chapter is a section on 'returning home'. Firstly, there is a relatively small number of permanently settled returnees, due largely to the continuing limited number of opportunities at home. There are few jobs outside of farming, and this is unlikely to change in the future. Yet, by returning home the migrant demonstrates to his relatives and his villagers that he is fulfilling their expectations. These extend to generous gifts to friends and relatives, and to donations to village projects. The returnee gains in status and wealth, but he is often disillusioned by corruption and overburdened by all the obligations expected of him. Older returnees can adapt back again quicker than young returnees. Returnee investment is mostly directed to traditional outlets: houses, land, perhaps a small business. Salmon, C. pp. 55-59. "Le retour de petits americains", Travail, 2-3 (1983), Saloutos, T. Thev remember America: The story of the repatriated Greek Americans (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1956). One of the very few largescale early studies of return migration, this study mostly refers to the period 1908-24, stressing the years immediately before and after the First World War (1911-14, 1919-21), when repatriation was heaviest. Reference is also made to post-Second World War repatriation, and it is noted that the motives for, and character of return migration have not appreciably changed over this nearly 50-year period. Returnees to Greece were accorded different treatment in different places; in some places ignored, in others respected. Of the half million Greeks who had emigrated to America by 1931, about 40% eventually returned. Some repatriates were simply fulfilling their original intention of returning home as soon as their financial status improved. Others had various and complex motives: nostalgia, the effects of the 1907 US recession, loyalty to the Greek cause in the wars against Turkey, the desire to find a Greek wife, climate and health. The amount of money the returnee took back varied with his date of arrival in the US, the length of his residence, his personal spending habits and the type of work done. As a rule, the repatriate was a small businessman, a restaurateur or shopkeeper, or an employee in some workshop or small industrial plant. There were few professionals in the return flow. Wealthy businessmen were also absent; those who had become rich tended to stay on. The returnee often returned in a highly emotive state of mind; he gave little thought to the problems of settling back in Greece. Most headed back to urban areas, though there were large numbers who went back to their natal villages. Especially in the towns, returnees were viewed as moneyed upstarts: scorned but also envied. Coming mostly from poor rural origins, migrants were not thought of as having gained culturally or intellectually. They had become wealthy by working long hours in menial jobs. In rural areas the welcome home was more genuine. A number of nicknames for the returnees are described, and their behaviour traits analysed - clothes, speech, mannerisms etc. Many returnees were unhappy, finding reintegration difficult and being dissatisfied with many facets of Greek life. A number of case histories are presented. Overall, however, Greece received considerable financial, social and psychological benefit from the returnees. They brought new views on democracy, health standards, social behaviour, business practices etc. They also imported pro-American, pro-Western, free enterprise sentiments. - 119 - WE Salvatori, F. Jeunes migrants de la deuxieme generation; Identite culturelle et liens avec le pays d'originer preformation et formation professionnelle pour le retour; reintegration socialeP culturelle et professionnelle au retour; contribution presentee par la Federation CGIL-CISL-UIL, ILO Tripartite Technical Seminar on Second-Generation Migrants, Granada, 1982 (Geneve, 1982, IL0-RER/79/001/Sem.11/19.C), 24 p. Conference paper presenting the views of a trade union federation in Italy concerning Italian second-generation migrant (immigrant) youth in Western Europe. Covers cultural factor identity, prevocational training and vocational training, return migration, employment opportunity and social integration. NC Samaroo, B. "In sick longing for the further shore: Return migration by Caribbean East Indians during the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries", in Return Migration and Remittances; Developing a Caribbean Perspectiver ed. by W.F. Stinner, K. de Albuquerque and R.S. Bryce-Laporte, RUES occasional papers no. 3 (Washington D.C., 1982), pp. 45-72. NC* Samuel, T.J. "Migration of Canadians to the USA; the causes", International Migration, vol. 7, Nos 3-4 (1969), pp. 106-116. About half this paper is concerned with the causes of return migration. Among the causes discussed are economic factors of rising wages and opportunities in Canada, disappointed expectations in the US, domestic ties, social and political factors (the Vietnam war, violence in the US). Unfortunately very few data are employed to verify these reasons, and there is a heavy reliance on the work of others. AS Sanbar, E. "Territorialites palestiniennes: La communaute nationale palestinienne et l'idee du retour", Peuples Mediterraneens-Mediterranean Peoples. 18 (janvier-mars 1982), pp. 129-143. WE Sanchez, F. "Les migrants retournent-ils en Espagne? Motif de leur retour", Migrations (series informations), 8, 1967. NC* Sandis, E.E. "Characteristics of Puerto Rican migrants to and from the U.S.", International Migration Review, vol. 4 No. 1 (1970), pp. 22-43. This paper sets out to assess the current state of knowledge about the socio-economic and motivational characteristics of Puerto Rican migrants to and from the US mainland. Various data sources are reviewed - US censuses, Puerto Rican Labour Department, the Bureau of Economic and Social Analysis in Puerto Rico - but each in turn only gives a partial coverage of the issue. The educational selectivity of Puerto Rican migration is discussed; it appears that returnees have a higher median value of years of schooling than those remaining in Puerto Rico (non-migrants) and those remaining in the US (migrant non-returnees). This is due partly to selection of migrants who leave Puerto Rico to begin with. Occupational selectivity yielded a similar pattern; 44% of returnees had white collar jobs, compared to 32% non-migrants and 17% migrant non returnees. Income levels of returnees are midway between those of Puerto Ricans in the US (higher) and of Puerto Ricans on the island (lower). Return involves a drop in income but to a level well above the island average. An interesting hypothesis is put forward that return migrants are people who were downwardly mobile in occupation in the US and returned to Puerto Rico to re-establish their status. A plea is made for better data to test this and other hypotheses. - 120 - WE Sandlund, T. "Economic change and migration: The Finnish case", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 201-209. Examines the different periods and patterns of Finnish migration and analyses the reasons for return. Statistics on migration between Finland and Sweden from 1968-1981 and distribution of population gain and loss between 1950 and 1975. WE* Sanjust, A.M. "Re-integration of returnees in Sardinia", Migration News, vol. 18, no. 2 (1969), pp. 14-18. An interview survey of 161 returnees carried out in various communities in Sardinia in 1968. Most had been in the Federal Republic of Germany. 94% returned to the same community from which they had emigrated, and 62% to the same job they had done before departure. Only a relatively small proportion had improved their occupational standing via emigrating. Among reasons stated for return (some respondents cited more than one) were family reasons (122 cases), economic interests in Sardinia (49), low earnings abroad (35), shortage of work (19) and high cost of living (18). Returnees expressed mixed feelings on how they found Sardinia upon return. The survey looked at attitude formation and influence through migration. 51% were of the opinion that their own emigration experience would be a positive contribution to improving Sardinia; 49% felt otherwise. AS Sannyasi, B.D., and Chaturvedi, B. A Report on the Emigrants Repatriated to India Under the Assisted Emigration Scheme from South Africa and on the Problem of Returned Emigrants from all Colonies (Calcutta, 1931). WE Santos, A.M.D. "Les emigrants portugais et le retour au pays", Options mediterraneennesf 22 (1973), pp. 67-69. WE Saraceno, E. Emigrazione e rientri II Friull-Venezia Giulia nel secondo dopoeuerra (Udine, Cooperativa editoriale "II Campo" 1981), 102 p. WE Saraceno, E. "Scuola e rientri: il caso di S. Giovanni in Fiore", Dossier Europa Emigrazione, 10 (1980), pp. 5-8. WE Saraceno, E. An analysis of the three main types of reentry in Udeine and Pordenone fom 1970 to 1977 (0ECD, 1978). WE* Saraceno, E. "The occupational resettlement of returning migrants and regional development: the case of Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Italy", in R. King (ed.) Return migration and regional economic problems (London, Sydney, Dover, 1985), pp. 69-78. This study is in three parts. The first is a brief account of the circumstances surrounding return migration to the Friuli-Venezia-Giulia region. The second is an analysis of changes in the local industrial labour demand providing the economic framework within which migration and return took place. The third analyses the professional careers of return migrants and their occupational resettlement pattern. WE Saraceno, E. "Indagine sui rimpatriati nel Friuli-Venezia Giulia" Studi Emigrazione/Etudes Migrations, vol. 17, no. 58 (June 1980), pp. 174-202. [0352W] - 121 - WE Saraceno, E. "Return migration in Friuli-Venezia Giulia", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 67-71. Results of a survey of 1500 returnees to the Friuli-Venezia Giulia region conducted between September 1980 and March 1981. Work and family histories. WE AF SCDC Travailleurs migrants. Perspectives de retour (Groupe de recherches SCDC, 1975). AF* Schapera, I. Migrant Labour and Tribal Life: A study of conditions in the Bechuanaland Protectorate (London, Oxford University Press, 1947), 248 p. An early study of South African labour migration, mostly to the mines, which makes some reference to return and its effects on tribal life. Many men return home frequently for agricultural work, for a rest and to keep in touch with their families and tribal societies. There were complaints, however, that the younger men do not stay at home for very long. Data are presented to show that the duration of return visits has been falling. In 1931, 33% stayed for more than 12 months, in 1943 only 20%; and in 1931, 14% stayed for less than 12 months, in 1943, 35%. WE Schierloh, H. Le "ulluslonl del Ritorno" (Camerino, Istituto di Studi Linguistic! dell'Universita degli Studi, 1981), 32 p. WE Schilling, C. "Three research studies on Italian returnee migrants", Migration News, vol. 18, no. 2 (1969), pp. 1-24. WE Schmiedeck, R. "Motive zur Ab- und Ruckwanderung bei Osterreichischen Wissenschaftlern und Akademikern", K'dlner Zeitschrift fur Soziologie und Sozialpsvchologier vol. 3 (1973), pp. 594-606. WE* Schreiber, J.M. "Ethnicity as a factor in Italian temporary worker migration", in Brian M. Du Toit and Helen I. Safa (eds.) Migration and Urbanization; Models and adaptive strategies (The Hague, Mouton, 1975), pp. 265-271. A study of Italian migrant workers carried out in Molise in southern Italy. The sample of 203 returned or visiting migrants included two local ethnic sub-groups: 65 Albanians and 23 Slavs (such groups are fairly common in Italy, resulting from refugee migrations in the Middle Ages and later). Schreiber discovered a process of ethnogenesis whereby Molisans, and especially the Albanians and the Slavs, subjected to discrimination and abuse when abroad, reacted by identifying more strongly with their community. Return migration brings this enhanced ethnic consciousness back to the home village, where it stimulates a revival of local ethnic festivals and culture. WE* Schulte, A. Produktive Ruckkehr? Ruckwanderung. Beschaftigungsproblematik und Kooperativen in einer abhangig entwickelten Region. Das Beispiel Suditalien (Hannover, University of Hannover, 1985), 72 p. GE Scobie-de Maar, M.J.A. Migration and return of highly-qualified manpower: a bibliography of recent publications 1965-1971 (Oslo, Norwegian Research Council for Science and Humanities, 1971), 13 pp. WE Scuderi, M. and Sineri G. "Rimpatri e formazione professionale", Dossier Europa Emigrazione, 2 (1980), pp. 6-8. [0352W] - 122 - WE* Sealy, P. "Repatriation and the numbers game", Race Todayf (1970) vol. 2 No. 6, pp 191-192 and vol. 2 No. 77, p. 236. Plans for repatriating British blacks enjoy a growing currency. This short double paper looks at the likely numbers volunteering for assisted repatriation and finds them to be minimal. The wider political implications of a repatriation policy could involve a backlash from the British black community. WE* Secretaria de Emigracion. Jornadas sobre derecho de los emierantes en materia de seguridad social v desempleo (Madrid, Secretaria de Emigracion, 1985), 43 p. Discusses existing legislative measures on social benefits for Spanish migrants, with particular reference to the bilateral agreements on social security between Spain and the Federal Republic of Germany and Spain and the Netherlands. WE* Secretaria de Estado da Emigracao - Centro de Estudos Potencialidades distritais para o investimento de emierantes (5 volumes) (Porto, Centro de Estudos, 1985). Sectoral studies and material concerning investment for five Portuguese districts: Viana do Castello, Braga, Braganca, Porto, Vila Real. WE* Seferagic, D. "Scientific work in Yugoslavia on migrant returnees and their impact on the mother country", International Migration Review, vol. 2, no. 3 (1977), pp. 363-364. This is a review paper largely made up of abstracts of available studies on Yugoslavian return migration, most of which are in Serbo-Croat and published or issued by the Centre for Investigation of Migrations of the Institute of Geography, University of Zagreb. The documentation is arranged by republic. Synthesising the results of the 20 studies summarised, Severagic offers the following brief conclusions: (i) returns have not been in distinct waves like the emigration; (ii) return is not yet institutionalised, with only 50% of returnees consulting Employment Services; (iii) savings are mostly invested in housing and consumer goods; (iv) the positive effect on the Yugoslav economy is minimal; (v) more attention should be given to formulating policy related to return: a better organisation of banks and customs facilities, and a long-term switch from exporting people to importing jobs and foreign investment. WE Seilhamer, S., Prewitt-Diaz, J. "The return and circulatory migrant student", Migration Today, vol. 11, No. 1 (1983), pp. 20-23. WE* NC Semmingsen, I. "Emigration and the image of America in Europe, in Henry Steele Commager (ed.) Immigration and American History (Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press, 1961), pp. 26-59. This unusual paper looks at the influence that letters from migrants in America and returned migrants from America had on the image of America held in European countries like Norway, Poland, Italy and Ireland. Most of the paper draws material from Norwegian accounts, and there are some fascinating passages describing return migrant behaviour in rural Norway in the mid-nineteenth century. The migrants, mostly Norwegian peasants who became farmers in the American Mid-West, behaved ostentatiously on their return, flaunting their American drawl and habits (chewing gum, smoking incessantly). They complained of the backwardness of rural Norwegians. After 1880 Norwegian migration to the US became more temporary, with a larger number of returnees. The 1920 Norwegian census [0352W] - 123 - showed many returnees, and most were youngish (40% returned before the age of 40); 72% had been abroad for 2-9 years. Most returnees took over farms, but after 1880 fishing also became popular. Returnees were amongst the first to adopt agricultural machinery and tended to introduce a more rational view of life and work in general. WE Serra-Santana, E. "Return of Portuguese: Economic goals or retention of one's identity",in The politics of return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 55-56. Results of a research project carried out between 1978 and 1981 consisting of interviews with 34 families of returnees. Motives and patterns of the return to Portugal. WE Seruya, L.M. and Pisco, M.L. 0 retorno dos emigrantes Portugueses na Europa e o desenvolvimento regional - Hipoteses de investigacaor paper presented at the Conferencia sobre Regionalizacao Desenvolvimento, Lisbon, October 7-8, 1982. IED. NC Sheffield, E.F., McGrail, M.M., eds. The retrieval of Canadian graduate students from abroad (Ottawa, Association of Univiersities and Colleges of Canada, 1966). NC* WE Shepperson, W.S. Emigration and disenchantment: Portraits of English repatriated from the United States (University of Oklahoma Press, 1965). 211 p. The insights into returned migrants presented in this historical study are gleaned from the writings of those who had themselves lived in the United States but had not emigrated permanently. This being the case, the picture that emerges and the views expressed are very much those of the middle and upper classes. The views of the returning labourer are not explored. The book is divided into six sections, each discussing a particular set of causes for return. The first section sets out the two-way movement of Englishmen across the Atlantic with reasons for this. Thereafter specific frustrations experienced by returnees are illustrated by case-studies of the individuals concerned. Through their eyes the US is portrayed as a land without plenty, a land of uncertain reward, of unfulfilled aspirations. The strength of ties to the UK are also important. Why did so many Englishmen return? The reasons are various but include misrepresentation by shippers and other of what America was like and had to offer, resulting in disappointment and disaffection when the reality was discovered. There were few real openings for the skilled artisan class. Emotional dissatisfaction and psychological discontent affected those who had not used their intelligence to think through their emigration motives. Another problem was the inability to come to terms with a society that still lacked refinement and culture, and with a different political system. Overall, the text is rather repetitive but provides an interesting set of insights into the migration and return of a privileged class who could not make the best of a decision once made. WE Siampos, G., Moussourou, L.M. Socio-cultural integration in Germany and reintegration of the migrants returning to Greece. paper presented at the International Workshop on "Cultural Identity and Structural Marginalization of Migrant Workers", held in Hamminkeln iiber Wesel, 10-12 December 1980. [0352W] - 124 - Signorelli, A., Tiriticco, M.C., Rossi, S. Scelte senza potere; il ritorno degli emigrantl nelle zone dell'esodo (Roma, Officina Edizioni, 1977), 306 p. Monograph on return migration in Southern Italy. Presents the results of a 1974-75 questionnaire/survey of the age, educational level, marital status, housing, class attitudes, desire for cultural change, political participation, trade unionization, occupational status and economic conditions of returned migrant workers and how they use their savings. Signorelli, A. "Regional policies in Italy for migrant workers returning home", in R.D. Grillo (ed.) 'Nation' and 'State' in Europe; Anthropological Perspectives (London, Academic Press, 1980), pp. 89-103. Italian governments and authorities have consistently encouraged emigration but ignored return migration. Only very recently, with the establishment of regional administrations and with the First National Conference on Emigration in Rome in 1975, have the rudiments of a policy on returnees emerged. Some researchers have explained repatriation by reference to certain individual characteristics of the emigrants such as age, education, geographical origin, etc. According to Signorelli, migration, and therefore return migration, is less the result of individual initiatives, or of the surplus of workers in the sending countries, than the product of the development model adopted by advanced industrial countries. From this structural point of view an immigrant becomes integrated (or not) for reasons other than his psychological attributes. The stability of his employment depends on the extent to which it is profitable to keep him or dismiss him. Further, an emigrant who returns is not so much a man without qualities, or who has failed to adapt, as a unit expelled from a particular, precarious sector. The post-return situation can also be defined in structural terms: the hypothesis is that the migrant will be either under-employed or unemployed, or underpaid, or in precarious employment. A series of questions can be asked to explore these relationships: (1) what are the interests of the emigrants who go back to their own country? (ii) are the emigrants aware of these interests? (iii) if this is not so, then what are the interests imposed on them by other groups and classes? (iv) what do emigrants expect of public institutions? (v) how do public institutions such as the regional administrations respond to these expectations? Some of these questions are dealt with in reference to the south Italian region of Apulia. Studies completed seem to show that returned migrants are aware of their own interests but act in pursuit of these interests only in the sense that they emigrate abroad to acquire the means to change their situation at home. The change that they strive for is not to press for stable work conditions at home; they aim instead at personal security in the ownership of house and land, which may be rented out to provide an income. The 'change' sought is a personal one, not of the social system of which they are part. The returnees seek change through individual action (by accumulating savings by extreme self-denial for a period abroad), not through collective action (such as political or trade union activity aimed at modifying the overall patterns of work, investment etc.). Emigration is thus inexorably reproduced, either handed down from one generation to another, or in the same person who ultimately has to emigrate again if his 'security' fails. Pursuing a private strategy for change does not therefore act in the real interests of the emigrants. Even so, emigrants abroad do experience realisations about the lack of justice in Italy and the shortcomings of public institutions there, but few believe that they can do anything to change the system, and therefore political party and trade union membership is low amongst returnees. Four policies for the Apulian region emerge: (i) vocational training and - 125 - retraining of returnees in directions relevant to the needs of the regional labour market; (ii) inserting individuals into jobs for which they have qualifications or experience; (iii) guidance, technical assistance and financial aid to small investors who wish to start productive activities in agriculture, craft, trade or industry; (iv) similar incentives to (iii) to be given to those who wish to form cooperatives. WE Signorelli, A. The reintegration of second-generation migrants and the adult migrant return process, ILO Tripartite Meeting on the Reintegration of Second-Generation Migrants in Cases of Voluntary Return, Belgrade, October 1984 (Geneva, 1984, IL0-RER/79/001-SEM.III/1), 38 p. WE Signorelli d'Ayala, A. Contadinl ed emigrazione. II problema del rientro e l'impiego dei risparmi, Relazione tenuta a Trieste il 4 ottobre 1975 presso l'Istituto di Giornalismo Agricolo, 20 p. WE Silva, M. (co-ordinator) Return, emigration and regional development in Portugal (Lisboa, Instituto de Estudos para o Desenvolvimento, 1983). WE* Silva, M. "0 fenomeno do retorno na dinamica do emprego e do desenvolvimento regional", Desenvolvimento. vol. 1, No. 2 (July 1985), pp. 115-132. Based on the results of a survey carried out in 1984, the article deals with return migration estimates and previsions; brief socio-economic characterisation of the returned emigrants; modes of reinsertion of the returnees in the Portuguese economy and impact of return migration on regional development. WE Silva Santos, I. "Algunas consideracoes sobre o retorno de emigrantes", Analise social (5), 18 (1967), pp. 288-298. LA Simmons, A.B., Cardona, G.R. "Rural-urban migration: who comes, who stays, who returns? The case of Bogota, Colombia, 1929-1968", International Migration Review, No. 18 (Summer 1972), pp. 166-181. AF Simon, G. "Industrialisation, emigration et reinsertion des emigres en Afrique du Nord. Le cas de la Tunisie et de l'Algerie", in Recherches sur 1'industrialisation et 1'urbanisation en Mediterrannee, Afrique du Nord, Espagne, Grece, iournees d'etudes du 14 et 15 mars 1975 (Universite de Poitiers, travaux du Centre Geographique d'Etudes et de Recherches Rurales, 5, 1975), pp. 83-99. AF Simon, G. "Industrialisation, emigration, reinsertion de la main-d'oeuvre qualifee au Maghreb", Hommes et Migrations, No. 902 (15 mars 1976), pp. 1-14. Article on industrialisation, emigration and return migration of skilled workers in North African countries. AF Simon, G. "Faiblesse et difficultes des retours definitifs en Tunisie", Hommes et Migrations, No. 975 (15 sept. 1979), pp. 19-25. LA Simon, T. "Mexican repatriation in East Chicago, Indiana", The Journal of Ethnic Studies, Vol. 2, No. 1 (Summer 1974), pp. 11-23. WE Simoncelli, R. "La geografia dei rientri", in G. Valussi (a cura di) Italian! in Movimento (Pordenone, Grafiche Editorial! Artistiche Pordononesi, 1978), pp. 75-92. [0352W] - 126 - WE Sindacato Italiano Assistenti Social! Region! d'ltalia e i rlentrl degll emigrant!; atti del Convegno Europeo del Patronato sias Svoltosi a Lecce nei Giorni 30-31 ottobre 1976 (Roma 1976), 99 p. Conference report on the problems of return migration in Apulia in Italy. Discusses the demographic, economic and sociological aspects of emigration, presents the social assistance role of social services and comments on relevant legislation. WE* Sjollema, B.S. "Return migration and development aid: when the migrant workers in Western Europe go home", Migration Todayf No.5 (1965), pp. 14-24. An early paper on the problems and potentialities of return migration in Western Europe. The discussion is couched in very general terms but one or two specific points of interest are made, for instance the tendency of returnees not to settle back home and to become schizophrenic in their divided loyalties and in their inability to decide where they belong. AF* Skinner, E.P. "Labour migration and its relationship to socio-cultural change in Mossi society", Africa, vol. 30, No. 4 (1960), pp. 375-401. Labour migration is a prominent feature of most contemporary African societies. In this long paper Skinner shows how the migration of several thousand Mossi from Burkina Faso to Ghana is related to socio-economic changes taking place in Mossi society. The paper is based on field data collected from two Mossi villages. Already by 1914 the Mossi had developed a pattern of seasonal migration which harmonised with their agricultural cycle. Labourers were able to work abroad to raise money for their taxes and other purposes, and maintain their fields during regular seasonal return visits. They were away December to May. Still today, money is the overwhelming migration motive. On the other hand there is a tendency for about 20% to fail to return in any one year, and some migrants spend 2-3 years in Ghana before returning home. Interestingly, migrants try to return in the middle of the night, under cover of darkness. Skinner puts forward the following reasons for this: (i) it is a practice carried over from the days when a migrant returning in daylight would be seized upon and robbed; (ii) the migrant wants to avoid being spotted by the retainers of the chief, who might make unreasonable demands for gifts; (iii) he wants to play down the emotion of the return, and so he creeps in when everyone is asleep. The only occasion when a returnee is a centre of attention is when he visits the main market place in his district - a symbolic day of exhibitionism, wearing of fine clothes, payments of cash and beer to friends and relatives and to accompanying minstrels who sing his praises and those of his ancestors. Once the celebrations are over the migrant is reabsorbed without further fuss: migration brings little lasting prestige beyond a few worldly goods (bicycles, clothes, some furniture, kerosene lamps etc.). Wife stealing is a more serious problem, and is largely associated with migrancy. All in all, this is a valuable contribution to the study of return migration in the West African context, and it is regrettable that it has not been followed by similarly detailed and rigorous, and more up-to-date studies. AF* Skinner, E.P. "Labor migration among the Mossi of the Upper Volta", in Hilda Kuper (ed.) Urbanization and Migration in West Africa (Westport, Conn., Greenwood Press, 1965), pp. 60-84. Covers much the same ground as the 1960 paper but with some additional data collected on brief visits in the early 1960s. [0352W] - 127 - WE* Slater, M. "Migrant employment, recessions and return migration: some consequences for migration policy and development", Studies in Comparative International Development, vol. 14, No. 3-4 (Fall-Winter 1979), pp. 3-22. Foreign migrants in Western Europe are finding their presence resented by increasingly wide sections of the host communities. Pressures for return mounted during the 1970s. Two reasons are adduced for this: economic recession since 1973; and the belief that migrants constitute a political and a social burden. A large-scale return movement has, however, not taken place, in spite of a high level of job loss amongst migrants and the fact that they are concentrated in insecure sectors of the labour market. The data on emigration and returns across the 1973/74 recession periods are reviewed. Emigration certainly fell dramatically (except for Italy, an EEC member and therefore protected by free movement rights); returns rose, but not so sharply as emigrants fell. The experience of the Federal Republic of Germany contradicts the assumption that those migrants who return are the ones who can most easily be sent home: over 1973-75 Turks in the Federal Republic of Germany only decreased by 4% whereas Italians and Spaniards both registered declines of 30%. Slater suggests that employers tend to keep on the more docile Turkish workers (Spaniards and Italians are more active in union affairs). Turks are likely to not want to return because of the lack of jobs back home, whereas the Spanish and Italian economies have been more buoyant. The conclusion reviews the policies enacted in various countries to encourage repatriation: the French grants for returning migrants; the French and German vocational training programmes for migrants prior to their return; and investments by France, the Federal Republic of Germany etc. in the sending countries. GE Sobbrio, G. "A proposito di talune e condizioni economiche per realizzare un maggiore equilibrio fra emigrazione e rientri", Affari Sociali Internazionalif 4 (die. 1973), pp. 39-51. WE Sole, R. "Retour des Emigres", Hommes et Migrations. 983 (janv. 1980), pp. 23-26. WE Sole, C. "Return of internal migrants from Catalonia", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 57-60. Results of a survey of households in the metropolitan area of Barcelona. Main variables determining immigrant's willingness or intention either to stay or to return. WE Souza-Ferreira, E. de Research project: Economics of the reintegration of emigrants, the case of Portugal. ILO Tripartite Meeting on the Reintegration of Second-Generation Migrants in Cases of Voluntary Return, Belgrade, 1984 (Geneva, ILO, 1984), 10 p. WE* Souza-Ferreira, E. Reintegracao dos emigrantes Portugueses - Integracao na CEE e Desenvolvimento Economico (Lisbon, CEDEP, 1984), 137 p. Analyses the reinsertion of returning migrants in the Portuguese economy in relation to Portugal's integration in the EEC. Reviews migration policies in France and the Federal Republic of Germany as well as Portuguese labour market prospects. Concludes with a series of proposals for a regional development oriented Portuguese reintegration policy. [0352W] - 128 - WE SSAE "Services pour le retour et la reinsertion des immigres", Accueillirr 46 (Janvier 1978), pp. 1-6. WE SSAE "L'experience finlandaise: retour et reinsertion des travailleurs immigres", Accueillir, 48 (mars 1978), pp 3-6. AS SSAE "Au Japon: le retour des enfants", AccuejJLlir, 48 (mars 1978), pp. 1-6. WE AF SSAE "Les immigres en milieu rural et la formation: 1) Des collegiens portugais en Auvergne; 2) Des Africains candidats au retour", Accueillir, 72 (juillet-aout 1980), pp. 6-10. GE Stark, T. "II ritorno degli emigrati. Stato attuale degli studi e proposte", Studi Emigrazionef No. 8 (febbraio 1967), pp. 172-178. Critical analysis of the research studies on return migration. WE* Stark, T. "Should the migrant workers in Europe be encouraged to return to their home country?", Migration News, vol. 16, No. 2 (1967), pp. 5-14. A useful summary of the OECD Seminar on "Emigrant workers returning to their home country" held in Athens in April 1966. The first point made was the newness of the phenomenon, never examined before in the technical literature. Accurate numbers on returnees are impossible to come by. Policies and attitudes on return vary both among sending and receiving countries. Turkey and Greece favour returns, Italy has no policy as yet, Spain's attitude is that of the free choice of the migrant and in Portugal economic conditions do not favour substantial returns. France and the UK generally favour assimilation of ethnic minorities; the Federal Republic of Germany and Switzerland do not. Some studies of return migration mentioned motivation but their validity was questioned. In Greece most returnees head for towns. Greek, Turkish and Italian survey data indicate that returnees want independence not factory work. More adaptive training for returnees is needed, both abroad and in the home country. AF Stelzer, J.P. "Retour des (aout-sept. 1977), pp. 10-12. WE Stichting Nederlands Centrum Buitenlanders Experimental scheme of returnee development projects for foreign workers: policy and implementation bv the NCB-IMOS Office , Report covering the period August 1976 - October 1980 (Utrecht, 1980). Report on the role of the Netherlands in an experimental employment creation scheme for migrant workers through promotion of development projects in their country of origin after return migration. Reviews background of the scheme, implementation, institutional framework and effects, focusses on migration policy and international co-operation implications, and includes recommendations. NC Stinner, W.F., de Albuquerque, K., Bryce-Laporte, R., eds. Return migration and remittances: developing a Caribbean perspective (Washington, D.C., Research Institute on Immigration and Ethnic Studies, Smithsonian Institution, 1982), 322 p. Essays on return migration and emigrant remittances in the Caribbean. travailleurs Algeriens", travailleurs Accueillir, 42 - 129 - Discusses the motivation for and types of return, historical and current trends, geographic distribution, demographic characteristics, use of remittances, related social implications and economic implications, etc.; includes case studies of Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, Costa Rica, El Salvador and Suriname. NC Stockton, W. "Going home: The Puerto Rican's new migration", The New York Times Magazine (November 27, 1978), pp. 89-90. WE Storbeck, D. "Flucht oder Wanderung? Eine Ruckschau auf Motive, Folgen und Beurteilung der Bevolkerungsabwanderung aus Mitteldeutschland seit dem Kriege", Soziale Welt, vol. 14, No. 2 (1963), pp. 153-171. WE Stbssel, R. Die Ruckwanderung (Schwarzenbach, 1958), 137 p. WE Stout, H.S. "The morphology of remigration: New England University men and their return to England 1940-1960", Journal of American Studies, 10 (2 August 1976), pp. 151-172. LA* Strachan, A. "Government-sponsored return migration to Guyana", Area. vol. 12, No. 2 (1980), pp. 165-169. What can be done to stop or reverse the brain drain from developing countries? Since independence in 1966 Guyana has operated a sponsorship scheme to top up the already considerable return flow of qualified Guyanese. The operation of this scheme is reviewed. Numerically it has not been a great success, but it has attracted back some highly qualified personnel to fill important jobs. The scheme seems to favour blacks over East Asians. Because of the high level of public ownership in Guyana, the scheme could not be easily introduced to other developing countries. WE* Strachan, A. and King, R. Emigration and return migration in southern Italy; A multivariate, cluster and map analysis (Leicester: Leicester University Geography Department, Occasional Paper 9, 1981), 21 p. This largely methodological paper examines regional contrasts in rates of emigration and return migration in southern Italy. The analysis is for the three regions of Puglia, Basilicata and Calabria and uses data at the commune level, there being 788 communes in the three regions. Shortcomings of these micro-level data are recognised. A range of data is incorporated into the analysis, including annual runs of emigrant and return migrant numbers, figures for population 'temporarily absent' and socio-economic variables on population structure, employment, education and housing drawn from the 1961 and 1971 censuses. A principal components analysis of 26 migration and related variables yielded six components (social status, active labour force in agriculture, temporarily absent, return migration ratio, housing amenities, and age structure) whose spatial patterns were then computer-mapped. Most of the mapped patterns echoed the same basic regional contrast between, on the one hand, relatively high status, economically prosperous Puglia and, on the other hand, the more upland, economically problematic regions of Basilicata and Calabria. The return ratio (return migration compared to outmigration) was highest in Puglia. A composite map based on a clustering algorithm synthesised these patterns into regions of varying status and migration trends. von Auslandsschweizern seit 1939 - 130 - LA* WE Strachan, A.J. "Return migration to Guyana", Social and Economic Studies, (Kingston) vol. 32, No. 3 (1983), pp. 121-142. This study summarises some of the relevant findings of European research and compares this with evidence available for the Caribbean in an effort to highlight similarities as well as differences. Then, using official sources, an analysis is made of the return movement to Guyana. How many people are returning? What type of person is involved? (age, ethnic origin, occupation) and where are they coming from? An interview survey provided information about a sample of return migrants. Why had they gone abroad? How long had they stayed? And why had they returned? Their life since returning is considered, as are their attitudes towards being home and how satisfied they are at being back. In a concluding section the dilemma facing Guyana is outline and discussed. The return flow is very considerable, the quality and motivation of the returnees is high, but the satisfaction levels expressed are very low, leading to thoughts of re-migration. WE Studi Emigrazione/Etudes migrations "The policies for economic and social reintegration of return migrants in the Mediterranean basin", Studi Emigrazione/Etudes migrationsf vol. XVIII, No. 63 (Sept. 1981), pp. 337-347. Summary of an international seminar held in Catania in December 1979. Results of the different reports on the economic and social reintegration of returnees in Italy, Yugoslavia, Spain and Turkey. GE Studi Emigrazione/Etudes Migrations L'emigrazione di ritorno; Rassegna bibliografica, No. 72 (December 1983). Bibliography on return migration. NC* Sutton, C. and Makiesky, S. "Migration and West Indian racial and ethnic consciousness", in Helen I. Safa and Brian Du Toit (eds.) Migration and Development (The Hague: Mouton, 1975) pp. 113-144. In this study of a Barbadian village the authors suggest that returned migrants bring back new values and beliefs when they go back home. Returnees from the United States contribute to the awakening of racial and political consciousness. Whilst only a few returned migrants were directly involved in introducing Black Power ideology and literature into the village, most were conveyors of political messages, however inadvertently. WE SVIMEZ "Emigrazione di ritorno", Informazioni SVIMEZf vol. 28, No. 5 (15.3.1975), pp. 185-186. GE* Swanson, J. "The consequences of return migration for economic development: a review of the literature", Papers in Anthropologyf vol. 20, No. 1 (1979), pp. 39-56. Americans mistakenly take it for granted that migrants aim only to settle in their new 'land of opportunity'. For most migrants, however, America is perceived as a transitory episode, a means to various ends such as paying of debts, building homes, buying land or starting a business in the 'old country'. In this review, discussion of the economic effects of return migration focuses around four key issues: manpower loss, remittances, repatriated skills, repatriated ideas. Students of emigration generally regard manpower loss as a good thing so long as it reduces the problem of unemployment of unskilled workers in the sending society. Sometimes, however, it goes too far, leading to the collapse of agriculture and the complete depopulation of villages. Evidence from countries [0352W] - 131 - like Turkey shows that most emigrants are skilled workers which causes consequent problems of skill shortage In the sending labour market. It is difficult to distinguish how much the shift from agriculture to emigration as the mainstay of the peasantry is the consequence of depopulation and how much it is the result of a larger volume of remittances which increasingly dwarfs traditional farm revenue. Remittances constitute an important element in the balance of payments, as Swanson 's own research in Yemen shows. Economic theoreticians are generally pessimistic in their speculations about the developmental role of remittances. Certainly, large segments of migrant earnings are spent on raising living standards and another large portion finds its way into the conspicuous consumption of large and elaborate housing. Little remittance capital finds its way into productive enterprises. Remittances may also create inflation. The introduction of new ideas certainly accompanies return migration but generally these reflect superficial urban consumerism rather than meaningful change. Skill acquisition is equally equivocal. If the migrant was unskilled when he left, he is unlikely to return with useful new trades. Any skills learnt abroad are likely to be irrelevant to the labour market of the return society. Some workers even lost, or failed to utilise, skills they previously exercised before leaving. In conclusion, most evidence points to conservative models of return migration. The more favourable models of change and development are theoretically possible but seldom work out in reality. AS* Swanson, J.C. "Some consequences of emigration for rural economic development in the Yemen Arab Republic", Middle East Journal, vol. 33, No. 1 (1979), pp. 34-43. Since the development of oil fields in the Arab Peninsula tens of thousands of Yemenis have left their homeland to work as labourers. According to the February 1975 census, 1,230,000 Yemenis, 19% of the total population, were working abroad. This number has probably increased since 1975. For the most part, the migrants are adult males, 'sojourners' who spend a major part of their lives abroad but maintain their orientation towards their home country to which they ultimately expect to return. Because the Yemeni emigrant intends to return he follows an economic strategy aimed at minimising expenditure abroad in order to maximise the amount of money available for investment or conspicuous consumption back home. This 'ideology of return' thus ensures substantial remittance flows. These are now the largest source of foreign exchange. Emigration is the most important sector of the Yemeni economy after agriculture. This paper then goes on to examine the interplay between emigration and farming in three sample villages chosen from different environmental locations. The debate on migration's economic contribution to sending communities is sketched in. Judged on the criterion of whether the migrants themselves benefit from migration, the conclusion is that Yemeni migration is very successful. Returnees come back with savings, enjoy improved living standards and new houses abound. Wages in the sending villages have increased, but little consolidation of small holdings has occurred. Returnees and remittances bring in cash surplus to rural Yemen, for which there are few investment opportunities outside of houses and land. Land prices have shot up as a result. Some returnees invested in mills, but these now have limited markets due to their oversupply. Some investment has also occurred in modernising farming: irrigation, wells, tractors, etc., but there are inter-village contrasts here, depending on the varying potentials for agricultural intensification. At the same time, much marginal land is being abandoned, and food imports into Yemen rise. [0352W] - 132 - AF WE Taamallah, K. Les travailleurs tunislens en France; Aspects sociodemographiaues. economiaues et problemes de retour (Tunis, Publication de l'Universite de Tunis, 1980), 555 p. WE Tapinos, G., ed. International migrationf proceedings of a Seminar on demographic research in relation to international migration, held in Buenos Aires, Argentina, 5-11 March 1974 (Paris, CICRED, 1974), 303 p. WE Tapinos, G. "Retour et developpement: l'exemple Migrations Etudes (20 mars 1979), pp. 1-11. WE Tassello, G. and Favero, L. La problematica del ritorno deeli emigrati e del loro reinserimento in Italia, rapporto curato dal CSER su Commissione del CIEM (Rome, CSER, 1979), 277 p. NC* Taylor, Edward "The social adjustment of returned migrants to Jamaica", in Ethnicity in the Americas, edited by Frances Henry (The Hague: Mouton, 1976), pp. 213-230. An interesting insight into the Jamaican return movement, doubly valuable because of the paucity of good, detailed work in the West Indies. In Jamaica the emigrants are a privileged group in that they have had the chance to benefit from the migratory experience and are viewed as being fortunate by non-migrants. Those who return come back after 2-15 years abroad, bringing back skills and money to enhance their lives. The role of leadership in Jamaican return migration is discussed through the lives of William Bustamante and Norman Manley - political leaders whose philosophies were developed during years abroad. Also important is the continuity of the Jamaican return experience over the years between the 1880s movement to Panama and the post-war migration to Britain. The specific study carried out by the author was based on interviews with 135 returnees carried out during 1971-73. Taylor found that 70% of migrants had rural origins but returned to the city in search of work in the skilled and professional spheres. They returned mainly because of 'pull' forces - jobs, desire to set up in business, family ties, idea of contributing to the development of Jamaica, etc. The push factors were health, climate and racism. The returnees were mainly in the active age groups and had a lower rate of unemployment than the Jamaican average. However, satisfaction levels were not that high: 30% were satisfied, 61% fairly satisfied and 9% dissatisfied with their post-return situations. To account for this the concept of relative deprivation is introduced. This occurs when the returnee judges his position not by what he had before leaving for abroad, or by reference to the average of the population as a whole, but by comparison with those higher up the social scale. Re-emigration is often the result. WE Tempesta, I. "Comportamento sociolinguistico degli emigrant! salentini: indagine a Montesano e Miggiano", in Puglia ed emigrazlone di ritorno (Galatina, 1977), pp. 95-103. Social and socio-linguistic adaptation of Italian returnees in the region of Salento. WE Testa Alavez, J. Documentacion e informacion en la emigracion: una contribucion al estudlo de los movimientos migratorios (Madrid, Centro de Documentacion, Instituto Espanol de Emigracion, 1977), 410 p. [0352W] espagnol 1960-1978", - 133 - Reference book pertaining to migration policy, emigration and the problems of emigrants (incl. migrant workers, return migration, brain drain, etc.)Discusses problems of documentation and information sources, and includes a directory of research centres, information centres and international organisations with activities in this field. AS Thomas, E.-J. "Le phenomene migratoire et le retour des migrants en Turquie. Etudes de cas", in E.-J. Thomas Les travailleurs immigres en Europe; Quel statut? Etude comparative de la condition des travailleurs immigres en Europe (Paris, Presses de l'UNESCO, 1981), pp. 183—214. NC Thomas-Hope, E. Return migration; positive, negative or neutral Impact on development, paper presented to the conference "Migration and Development in the Caribbean", September 14-16, 1984 (College Park, Md., University of Maryland, mimeographed). WE* Thompson, S.L. Australia through Italian eves; a study of settlers returning from Australia to Italy (Melbourne, Oxford University Press, 1980), 271 p. About 25% of the 365,000 Italians settling in Australia since 1947 have returned, a substantial proportion for a country like Australia committed to immigrant settlement. This book is an account of a survey carried out in 1970 into returnees from Australia in selected communes in northern and central Italy (Provinces of Treviso and L'Aquila). The research aimed to discover why so many Italians had left Australia and what had happened to them on return. 138 households were interviewed in all. Returnees were categorised into those permanently resettled in Italy, those who were visiting and therefore planning to go back to Australia, and those who were undecided. The cost of the re-emigration is, however, often prohibitive. Family reasons dominated return decision. Important were social difficulties in Australia, including health circumstances. Economic security in Australia had to be balanced against psychological satisfactions in Italy. A lot of detailed descriptions are given of job experiences in Australia: many worked in factories, as concrete contractors, or as agricultural workers (cane cutting and tobacco fields). More than half were financially worse off since return; only a sixth were better off since return; the rest could not differentiate. Unfortunately there is little investigation of employment patterns since return - a big weakness of this study. Improved and new housing for returnees is discussed and considered a prime target for migrants' investment. Many returnees complained of the coolness and lack of friendliness of Australians, of discrimination at work and of general racial prejudice. Nor is the return without its problems; returnees find their home villages changed and many of their friends away abroad. But employment opportunities had improved somewhat compared to what they were before migrants left Italy. Most returnees acclimatised back home after a while. The text of the book is liberally sprinkled with anecdotes and quotes from interviewees. », « Appendices give tabulations of official and interview data, and the questionnaire, together with notes on methodology. The bibliography reveals that this rather lightweight study was done largely in isolation of, and possibly in ignorance of other research on return migration, in Italy and elsewhere. There is also the inexplicable gap of ten years between the carrying out of the research and the publication of this book. , WE* Thompson, S.L. "Italians who returned home", in J. Zubrzycki (ed.) Enquiry into the Departure of Settlers from Australia (Canberra, Australian Government Publishing Service, 1973), pp. 51-60 [0352W] - 134 - A resume of the book summarised separately in the previous abstract. This resume concentrates on the data sources and problems and sets out the framework of research with very brief listing of results. NC Tobias, P.M. Emigrants' changing perception of home, paper presented at the American Anthropological Association, 82nd Annual Meeting, Chicago, 16-20 Nov. 1983. This paper, based on the phenomenological approach to the "everyday world" developed by Alfred Schutz, explains how emigrants' knowledge of "home" is newly created as each new social situation demands and why emigrants who finally return home after long absences often have difficulty readjusting. Illustrative materials are drawn from biographies of Grenadian emigrants. WE Toepfer, H. "Mobilitat und Investitionsverhalten tiirkischer Gastarbeiter nach der Remigration", Erdkunde, 34 (1980), pp.260 ff. WE* Took, L. "Land tenure, return migration and rural change in the Italian Province of Chieti", in R. King (ed.) Return migration and regional economic problems (London, Sydney, Dover, 1985), pp. 79-99. This study attempts to explore the tenure migration interface by means of a questionnaire administered to a sample of 82 return migrants interviewed in three villages located in Chieti. WE Toren, N. "The effect of economic incentives on return migration", International Migration, vol. 13, No. 3 (1975), pp. 134-144. This study demonstrates that the Israeli Government's incentive programme 1968-1970 aiming to promote the return of Israeli migrants has not achieved its goals. Analysis of the attitudes of return migrants toward the economic benefits of this programme. AS* Toren, N. "Return to Zion: Characteristics and motivations of returning emigrants', Social Forces, vol. 54, No. 3 (1976), pp. 546-558. This study investigates return migrants from the US to Israel and poses two crucial questions of migration research: "Who goes?" and "Why?". It also examines the links between the two, i.e. between migrants' characteristics and motivations. Characteristics are those bearing on "success" as measured by level of education and occupation; motivations are classified by developing and operationalising the push-pull model for explaining migratory selection and movement. The sample is composed of 191 returnees from the US who re-entered Israel in 1970 and were interviewed by means of a structured questionnaire in 1971. The data show that return migration from the US is non-selective and that returnees are motivated largely by the attraction of Istael rather than the repulsion of America. A subclassification of the push-pull dichotomy reveals that: (i) the decision of the more successful returnees is primarily influenced by perceived occupational opportunities back home; (ii) the less successful are motivated chiefly by patriotic and religious attachment and loyalty to Israel. AS* Toren, N. "Return migration to Israel", International Migration Review, vol. 12, No. 41 (Spring 1978), pp. 39-54. This is the most comprehensive account of Nina Toren's important work on Israeli return migration. Israel is a unique country migration-wise: immigration is the very raison d'etre of the state. In a sense this is return migration, after an absence of countless generations and thousands [0352W] / ^ * , l - 135 - of years. This was the spirit of the 1950 Law of Return which was based on the idea of the 'in-gathering of the exiles'. However, the Ministry of Immigrant Absorption, set up in 1968, also put out a separate policy for the 'returning residents', Israelis who had left Israel and who were to be tempted back. These people are called yordin, 'those who go down'; whereas new immigrants to Israel are called olim, 'those who go up' - a nomenclature which reflects the value-laden attitude towards the problem of migration to and from the country. There is a general feeling that those who leave Israel and settle in another country for extended periods are deserters. The return facilities for this group were applied to those who left Israel between 1952 and 1964 and who returned during 1968-70. The main incentives offered were: (i) interest-free long loans for travel and shipment of belongings; (ii) special mortgages for apartments; (iii) business loans to encourage the setting up of small factories, agricultural or other enterprises; (iv) customs and purchase tax relief (e.g. on buying or importing a car); (v) two years free secondary education for returnees' children. Non-migrants criticised these measures and the idea of 'deserters' getting favourable treatment, so the policy was abandoned at the end of 1970. Even so, the policy appeared in fact to have, little or no effect on drawing back emigrant Israelis. No significant increase occurred in the number of returnees for 1968-70 when compared to the years immediately preceding or following it. In the second part of the paper Toren looks at the motives of return of those who did return during this period. A sample of 199 subjects was drawn from the 1878 adult returnees who re-entered Israel in 1970. Most of the returnees came from the US but there were sizeable numbers from Canada and France too. Using a technique known as reason analysis, Toren presented respondents with a list of 25 reasons for returning to Israel and asked them to indicate the extent to which each reason had affected their decision. The 25 reasons focussed around 6 dimensions and included both push and pull factors. The dimensions were economic, occupational, family, social, personal problems and value commitments. Results showed that commitment to patriotic values was the most potent force for return. Second in importance were family motives. The economic dimension was relatively unimportant. When asked about the special benefits for returning Israelis, only 9% said that these had crucially affected their decision to return. For one-third of respondents, they had no effect, for another third they had a catalytic or triggering effect, and for another fifth they were one reason among others in the return decision. Torruellas, L.M. and Vazquez-Calzada, J.L. Labor Force Characteristics and Migration Experience of the Puerto Ricansf Part II. A cross sectional analysis of return migration to Puerto Rico using 1970 census data (Rio Piedras, Social Science Research Center, 1976). Townsend, A.R. "The role of returned migrants in England's poorest region", Geoforum, vol. 11, No. 4 (1980), pp. 353-369. Trebous, M. Migrations et developpement. Le cas de l'Algerie (Paris OCDE, 1970), 242 p. This important study concentrates on Algerian workers in France (and less so in Belgium and the Federal Republic of Germany) and on their vocational training prior to their return and reintegration into the Algerian labour market. The main conclusion is that it is in Algeria's interest to improve the preparation and selection of its workers who go to Europe and preferably to send workers of urban origin who are young, - 136 - unmarried and literate. The specific relevance of this conclusion was destroyed by Algeria's subsequent (1973) decision to terminate emigration. Nevertheless the study is a valuable record of Algeria's emigration prior to 1970 and of the occupational and training experiences of Algerian migrants in France, and the data on the productive reintegration of returning Algerian workers (Part 4 of the book) are detailed and of great use for comparative purposes. Algerian emigrants have an undying attachment to their home country. Many want to return to industrial jobs, but, finding them not available in great numbers in Algeria, re-emigrate to France. Unfortunately the return of the more skilled workers has not been rationally organised. The experience and potentials for returnees vary from one region to another in Algeria. Many detailed case-studies of returnees are referred to in footnotes. WE* Tribalat, M. "L'immigration des etrangers aux Pays-Bas", Population (Paris), vol. 40, No. 2 (mars-avril 1985), pp. 299-334 After a brief analysis of the history of immigration into the Netherlands, the author attempts to answer three questions: (i) how many foreigners who entered in any one year return home? (ii) how long do these foreigners stay in the Netherlands before they return? and (iii) what proportion of former return migrants go back to the Netherlands? The Dutch statistical material permits answers to all three questions for both men and women migrants and for various nationalities. Most return movements take place one or two years after arrival in the Netherlands; the overall propensity to return has been decreasing in the last three decades; there are striking differences among nationalities - for example, Italians and Spaniards return much more frequently than Moroccans and Turks - and up to a quarter come back to the Netherlands, especially among the nationalities tending to stay in that country. WE Trillat, M. "Problemes sociaux poses par les retours au pays d'origine", Accueillirr 56 (Janvier 1979), pp. 1-4. AS Tuna, 0. Yurda Donen Iscilerin Intibak Sorunlari (Ankara, SPO Research Report, 1967). AF WE Tunisie Contribution presentee par 1'Union Generale Tunisienne du Travail (UGTT)f ILO Tripartite Technical Seminar on Second-Generation Migrants, Granada, 1982 (Geneve, 1982, IL0-RER/79/001/SEM.11/24.C), 9 p. Paper on the social integration and return migration of Tunisian migrant workers and second-generation immigrant youth and children from EEC countries in Tunisia. Discusses migrant education and the involvement of migrant worker associations; suggests (1) leisure activities for visiting migrants and (2) social policy and economic policy measures in favour of returning migrants. WE Turkey, Devlet Planlama Teskilati Yurt dlsindan donen iscilerin sosyo-ekonomik egilimleri uzerinde bir calisma (Ankara, 1974). Report on a survey of the socio-economic behaviour of Turkish migrant workers upon their return to Turkey. NC Ugalde, A., and Langham, T. "International return migration to the Dominican Republic", paper presented at the Fifth Annual Meeting of Caribbean Studies Association Curacao, Netherlands Antilles, May 7-10, 1980, 24 p. [0352W] , » * - 137 - Characteristics of return migrants in the Dominican Republic who had difficulties in adjusting to the way of life in the country of immigration. UGT Espaenef Contribution presentee par 1'Union General de Trabaladores (UGT)t ILO Tripartite Technical Seminar on Second-Generation Migrants, Granada, 1982, (Geneve, 1982, IL0-RER/79/001/SEM.11/18.C.1), 8 p. Presenting the comments of a trade union federation in Spain concerning return migration of Spanish second-generation migrant (immigrant) youth. Covers migrant education, prevocational training, problems of unemployment and cultural factors. Underhill, E., Babel, M.F. "Return of migrant workers and their families to their country of origin", International Child Welfare Review. No. 34 (Sept. 1977), pp. 36-44. Conference paper on migration policies for return migration with particular reference to EEC countries. Examines problems of children and yough upon return to the home country, legal aspects of the transfer of social security contributions or benefits, the need for a unified system. UNESCO Seminaire international sur 1'identification des problemes auxauels se heurtent 1'insertion des migrants dans le pays d'accueil et leur reintegration dans leur pays d'origine (Geneve 26-30 avril 1976), 11 p. UNDP/ILO European Regional Project for Second Generation Migrants. Tripartite meeting on the reintegration of second generation migrants in cases of voluntary return, Belgrade, 17-19 October 1984. Final Report (Geneva, ILO, January 1985) 18 p. Also available in French. Unger, K. "Greek emigration to and return from West Germany", Ekisticsf vol.48, No. 290 (Sept-Oct. 1981), pp. 369-373. This article presents the first results of a study financed by the Volkswagen Foundation entitled "Remigration and social structures return migration of labour and its effects in urban Greece". The paper looks first at Greek migration statistics and then relates the first results of a questionnaire to 574 Greek returnees in Athens, Salonica and Serres. Greek migration statistics were terminated by law in 1977. For the period 1970-77 58% of emigration was to the Federal Republic of Germany and 61% of returnees came from that country. Based on a spatial framework of 52 districts, five migration/return migration indices are cross-correlated with various indices of regional socio-economic structure. The remigration ratio (returnees per 100 emigrants) is higher in districts with a higher proportion of their population working in industry and in services and where social and housing conditions are better. Moving to the results of the questionnaire survey, returnees had been abroad for an average of 11.4 years, and 53% would like to reemigrate to the Federal Republic of Germany. Return migration contributes to urbanisation: 56% of the returnees interviewed in Athens and Salonica originated in provincial, rural areas. Motives for the original emigration were mainly economic, but return motives were mainly related to family and personal circumstances. 42% regretted returning to Greece: hence the desire to go off again. Occupational data are presented for jobs before migration, first and last jobs in the Federal Republic of Germany and present job. A strong tendency is noted to avoid dependency employment since return. Destinations for savings and remittances are also described: most goes on house building, children's education, setting up a small business, purchase of a car and support of relatives. - 138 - WE Unger, K. Arbeitskrafteriickwanderung Universitat Bielefeld, 1982), 11 p. WE Unger, K. Die Riickkehr der Arbeitsemigranten Lauderdale, Verlag Breitenbach, 1983). WE* Unger, K. "Return migration and regional characteristics: the case of Greece", in R. King (ed.) Return migration and regional economic problems (London, Sydney, Dover, 1985), pp. 129-151. An English summary of Unger*s work. WE Unger, K. Greek emigration and return - structural factors and characteristics of the migrants, paper presented at the Symposium on Return Migration and Reintegration (Saarbriicken, Oct. 1980). WE Unger, K. "Occupational profile of returnees in three Greek cities", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europef ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 93-99. Results of a survey of 574 returnees from the Federal Republic of Germany to Athens, Salonica and Serres. Statistical data on the professional categories of the returnees and the change of occupation upon their return. WE* Unger, K. Regional characteristics and return migration - the case of Greece. (Bielefeld, Working paper No. 66 of the Sociology of Development Research Centre, University of Bielefeld, 1985), 29 p. As emigration (especially the European case of labour migration) can primarily be defined as a reaction of the individual towards certain factors of its surroundings, it is worthwhile to see to which extent the pattern of return migration is being affected by the areas of destination and of origin. The secondary data reported in this paper were collected from the different sources of the National Statistical Service of Greece (especially the Population and Housing Census of 1971), whereas the primary data was generated during a field work period in Greece in 1980. WE Uniao Geral dos Trabalhadores Portugueses Contribution presentee par 1'Union Generale des Travailleurs, ILO Tripartite Technical Seminar on Second-Generation Migrants, Lisbon, 1981 (Geneve, 1981, IL0-RER/79/001/ SEM.I/26), 18 p. Conference paper on second generation Portuguese migrants (youth) in Western European countries. Covers migrant education, cultural relations with Portugal, and measures taken relating to social integration, voluntary return migration and new migration in receiving countries. AS* Useem, J. and Useem, R.H. The Western educated man in India: a study of his social roles and influences (New York, Dryden Press, 1955), 237 p. The object of this book is twofold: to present the results of a field investigation in India of the consequences of a Western education; and to make proposals that may be of practical aid to policymakers interested in international cultural exchange. Social-anthropological fieldwork was carried out in Bombay State and consisted of 110 interviews with returned students, analysing their roles within the local environment. The book comprises five chapters on distinct themes of the study. The first describes the kind of persons who study abroad and their aims. Ch. 2 is concerned with the changes in character and outlook which result from [0352W] nach Griechenland (Bielefeld, (Saarbriicken, Fort - 139 Indians obtaining a Western education. With only few exceptions (3 out of 110) the foreign-educated rate their foreign experience as beneficial in their self-advancement, though there are some differences between returnees from Britain and from the US. Ch. 3 looks at a key problem, that of the role of returnees as transmitters of science, technology, skills and business methods. The fourth chapter asks whether persons educated abroad acquire a true understanding of the foreign country and, to the extent they do, to what extent this understanding is communicated to other Indians. Finally, the authors develop a series of policyrelevant suggestions. An interesting early study of a special type of return migration. A lot of use is made of quotes from the interviews. WE NC Vagts, A. Die deutsch-amerikanische Riickwanderung; Problemef Phanomenef Statistikf Politik, Soziologief Bioeraphie (Heidelberg, Beihefte zum Jahrbuch fur Amerikastudien, 1960), 216 p. WE* Van Amersfoort, H. Immigration and the formation of minority groups; the Dutch experience 1945-1975 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982), 234 p. Chapter 7 of this book is on the "immigration" or "return migration" of the Indonesian Dutch. The difficulty over terms is because some of the migrants were born in Indonesia and some in the Netherlands. They came to the Netherlands in 4 waves between 1945 and 1958. The repatriates had Dutch passports and were judicially Dutch, yet they received little welcome by the Netherlands authorities who thought they should have stayed in Indonesia after independence and adapted to the new situation. Yet, in spite of this opposition, they have integrated well and do not form a 'minority'. Repatriates themselves found certain problems however: the climate, the food, the Dutch 'coolness'. Factors enumerated for the successful reintegration of the repatriates were: their heterogeneity of status; their legal status as Dutch; their realism; the political situation which made it possible to ease the reinsertion by means of help with finance, housing, jobs, schools etc. WE* Van Amersfoort, J.M.M. "Migrant workers, circular migration and development", Ti.ldschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie. 69 (1978), pp. 17-26. The author starts off by reviewing the debate on migrants in Europe with particular reference to the issue of whether they are going to settle permanently or return. He criticises the notion that there is a simple unavoidable choice between a relatively quick return, on the one hand, and a permanent settlement of migrant families on the other. Van Amersfoort finds that Moroccan labourers in the Netherlands fit neither of these two types. They migrate fairly late in life when they are already married with established families, stay a long time in the Netherlands and have no concrete plans either to permanently stay or return. A more apt description of them is 'circular migrants' who migrate semi-permanently, or at least for long periods, spending one month each year in their villages of origin, most of which are in the Moroccan Riff area. As such they are unlike the typical West European migrant labourer and more like the circular migrants noted in regions like south-east Africa and the New Hebrides. In all cases, the migrant, although his stay abroad is long term, is almost totally oriented to his home village society. He is abroad only as a labourer and participates hardly at all in the social life of the foreign society. Though most of the Moroccan migrants studied by van Amersfoort expect to return to their villages one [0352W] - 140 - day for good, they have no idea when this will be. This type of migration has led to rising living standards in the Riff but for this improvement to be sustained, circular migration will need to expand further to take account of rising population in a stagnant peasant economy. Unfortunately reduced employment opportunities in Europe make this difficult. Circular migration has also increased the dependence of the Riff economy on outside sources and has not permitted development of the local resource base in any way. Circular migrants and returnees have little economic impact beyond sustaining their families and improving housing, diet and material living standards. Van Dijk, P.J.C., Penninx, R. Migration and development: the Netherland's REMPLOD project; an experimental venture in the integration of research in the field and policy making (The Hague, Institute for Social Research in Developing Countries, 1976), 12 p. Report on migration policy making in the Netherlands with regard to return migration to Yugoslavia, Portugal and North Africa. Covers the role of the Netherlands in employment opportunity creation for returning Yugoslav, Portuguese and North African migrant workers. Van Dijk, P. "Discussion notes on institutional arrangements", Conferencia sobre retorno e reinteeracao dos emierantes (Lisboa, Instituto de Estudos para o desenvolvimento, June 1984), 4 p. The author analyses the prospects of return migration in the light of the integration process in the country of immigration of migrant workers' families, who constitute the decision-making unit. Possible reintegration strategies should actively involve the chambers of commerce and industry, the agricultural organisations and, where applicable, investment banks in the countries of return. Van Gendt, R. and Garcia Passigli, G. Return migration and reintegration services (Paris, OECD-42 77 01 1, 1977), 64 p. If more attention could be paid to the reintegration of the return migrant and his family, the whole migratory process could be turned to greater benefit for all concerned. This report is the result of an OECD intergovernmental project in which many countries of high emigration participated. The first three chapters contain descriptive material on return migration: its causes, characteristics and consequences. Country statements are included for Finland, Greece, Italy, Portugal, Spain, Yugoslavia and Turkey. For each country there are sections on use of savings, employment services, training needs, social services, including housing and education, and information provision. Reintegration is viewed as a complex management problem. An integrated approach is called for, with emigration and immigration countries participating equally. Vanderkamp, J. "Return migration: its significance and behaviour", Western Economic Journal, Vol. 10, No. 4 (Dec. 1972) pp. 460-465. Return migration to Canada for the period 1966-68. Report of the size and time pattern of return flows. Vangelade, J. "Stocks and flows in the analysis of return migration", Populationf vol. 37, No. 6 (Nov.-Dec. 1982), pp. 1194-8. Distinctions between stocks and flows in the analysis of return migration, through the example of migration flows between Upper Volta and Ivory Coast. - 141 - WE Vaz Dias, M. 24 p. GE Vaz Dias, M. "Le retour volontaire: la formation retour n'est-elle qu'un piege?", Alphabetisation et Promotionf 98 (novembre 1980), pp. 29-31. WE Vaz Dias, M. "Le double rejet", Alphabetisation et Promotionf (septembre-octobre 1981), pp. 25-28. WE Vedris, M. "Policies on the return and work reintegration of Yugoslav migrant workers", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp 141-145. Examines the effects of out-migration on Yugoslavia and the economic impact of the measures adopted by the government to facilitate the returnees' reintegration. WE Velikonja, J. "Geography of return migration", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europef ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 247-250. Reviews the different theories and models applied to the problems of return migration by geographers. WE Verbunt, G. "Travailleurs etrangers dans 1'incertitude du retour", Cahiers d'actlon religleuse et socialef 484 (15 nov. 1968), pp. 661-664. AF Verhaeren, R. Les problemes de la reinsertion; Etude du travailleurs algeriens (St.Martin d'Heres, AEFTI, 1977), 10 p. CN Vidal, D. "The loneliness of the returning Newyorican", The San Juan Star (October 5, 1975), p. 5. WE* Vigorelli, P. "Returning migrants re-employed in Italian industry", Migration Newsf No. 18 (1969), pp. 3-13. An interview survey of 416 returnees was conducted in four large Italian chemical complexes. Returnees represent less than 2% of the workforce in these factories, although in other factories the proportion of returnees may be higher, up to 5%. Most returnees knew something about industrial opportunities in Italy before they returned, although personal reasons governed most of the actual return decisions. Most interviewees (87%) applied directly to the factories to get their jobs; only 9% used the Labour Exchange. 47% got a job immediately upon return. 85% had worked in industry abroad and thought therefore that they had accumulated valuable industrial experience, but only 12% returned with some qualification. About a third of returnees were contemplating emigrating again. Vigorelli considers that returnees who are oriented towards industrial employment are probably a minority of Italian returnees. Moreover, the sample interviewed is rather narrowly defined. WE Vigorelli, P. "La grande industria Italiana e il ritorno del lavoratori emigrati", in L'emigrazione italiana in Europa negli anni sessanta. ed. by G. Bonicelli (Roma, UNAIE, 1969), pp. 133-156. WE* Virtanen, K. Settlement or return; Finnish emigrants (1860-1930) in the international overseas return migration movement (Turku, The Migration Institute, 1979), 275 p. [0352W] Retour au Portugal; Vlaeem sem futuro (Paris, CIEMM, 1979), 107-108 cas des - 142 - Of the 380,000 Finnish emigrants before 1930, about 20% returned. This rate was about the same as that of other Nordic countries, but lower than the Southern European rate. Sample communities were studied, plus passenger statistics, passport data, church records and interviews. The most important reason for return was homesickness (21%) followed by unemployment (15%). Many returns took place as a result of an intended temporary visit home. From North America more returns took place from the east coast: it was easier to return from factory jobs than from farming. Returns from Australia, South America and South Africa were higher than from the US and Canada. The 1930 depression was important. Most of the returnees settled down back in Finland, using their savings to purchase a farm or house, making a significant local impact on the community. WE Virtanen, K. "Return migration of the Finns from overseas countries", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984),pp.221-228. Historical patterns of Finnish return migration since the 19th century. WE Von Delhaes-Gunther, Haberl, O.N., Parwez, 6., Schlumm, H.B. and Schmidtke, H.P. "Riickwanderung - eine Perspektive fur auslandische Arbeitskrafte?", Aus Polltik und Zeitgeschichte, Beilage zur Wochenzeitschrift das Parlamentf No. B 32/84 (11 August 1984), pp. 19-33. AS Vredenbregt, J. "De Baweaners in hun moederland en in Singapore" (with summary in English), Luctor et Emereo (1958). WE AF Wagner, M. Le retour promotionnel des immigres. Une experience francaise en matiere de transfert de technologie (Paris, Caisse Centrale de Cooperation economique, 1980). GE Wagner, M. "Vers une politique de cooperation entre les peuples: la formation retour", Migrants Formation (17-18 octobre 1976). WE Wagner, M. "La formation professionnelle des travailleurs immigres en vue de leur retour au pays d'origine. Analyse d'une experience", Droit socialf 12 (decembre 1976). WE* Wagner, M. "Vocational training for returning migrants", Migration Today. vol. 21 (1977), pp. 117-124. Projects for retraining returning migrant workers have been very few in Europe. A proper policy depends on the initiative and co-operation of the state authorities of the countries of immigration and emigration, and of course the migrant. The interactions are complex, often conflicting and frequently break down. Possible roles for the church are also identified. Walaszek, A. "Return migration from the USA to Poland", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europer ed. by D.Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 213-219. Historical patterns of Polish return migration from the U.S.A. as from the 17th century. Examines the role of the Polish ethnic organizations in the U.S. in the return movement. NC Walker, W.J. A geographical analysis of return migration: an Eastern Kentucky case study (Lexington, University of Kentucky, 1978), 215 p. [0352W] * -^ - 143 WE* Walsh, J.A. "Immigration to the Republic of Ireland, 1946-71", Irish Geography, vol. 12 (1979), pp. 104-110. The publication in 1978 of vol. II of the 1971 Irish Population Census enables for the first time detailed analysis of immigration into Ireland. In 1971, 1 in 22 people residing in Eire had been born outside the Republic - 80% in Great Britain and 8% in the US. Return migrants are classified as those immigrants who were born in Ireland. Immigrants numbered 11,000 during the year preceding the census, returning migrants 13,500. Most immigrants were nevertheless of Irish origin, mainly the second generation children born to return migrants. Age, sex, education and employment contrasts are also briefly noted. GE Walston, Lord pp. 7-8. GE Warren, R., Marks, P.J. pp. 113-124. NC Warren, R., Marks, P.J. "Foreign-born emigration from the United States: 1960 to 1970", Demography, vol. 17, No. 1 (1980), pp. 71-84. AS* Watson, J.L. Emigration and the Chinese Lineage: The Mans in Hong Kong and London (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1975), 242 p. Three chapters of this book touch directly or tangentially on return migration. They are chapter 7 on "Emigrant ties to the home community", ch. 8 on "Sterling houses" and ch. 9 on "social change". Together these three chapters comprise the second half of the book, the first half being concerned with a description of the emigration background and of the Mans in the London catering trade. Remittances are one indication of the commitment of Man emigrants to their home village on the northern side of mainland Hong Kong, 2 miles from the Chinese border. Some interesting, if rather speculative, data, based on Post Office and other local records, give indication of the massive importance of remittances to the village economy. 'Contribution drives' are launched amongst Mans abroad for financing public works - the renovation of the village temple being a case in point. The classic pattern of emigration involves 'deferred gratification' whilst abroad. The usual pattern is for the worker to deny and minimise his material needs (food, clothing, lodging etc.) whilst abroad in anticipation of the long planned for trip home, during which he will spend all his savings in a matter of months. Cheap charter flights enable an average frequency of return of once every 3-5 years. When emigrants return, a festival atmosphere prevails, which includes lavish banquets, gambling etc. 'Birthday banquets' are held for foreign-born sons, to legitimise the lineage which may involve Eurasian or other halfcaste offspring if the emigrant has married a non-Chinese. 'Sterlinghouses' are a prime target for remittance spending, transforming the physical appearance of the village. The village of San Tin has changed from being a centre of production to one of consumption. Nearly one-third of 'sterling houses' are left empty, however, as their occupants reemigrate to Europe. House investment is seen as the safest form of investment, now that land is no longer profitable with the decline of agriculture. Returned emigrants find life boring and uneventful in the village, so many re-emigrate. Those who remain in San Tin often become addicted to gambling. Some returnees bring back European wives: British, Dutch, German. [0352W] "Repatriation: why it is wrong", Race Today (May 1969), "La formation-retour", Migrations, 21 (1977), - 144 - WE* Watson, J.L. (ed.) Between two cultures: Migrants and minorities in Britain (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1977), 338 p. The interest of this book, by a group of anthropologists, is that it comprises a series of ethnically-focussed studies, all of which consist of fieldwork both in Britain and in the sending society. Many of these essays therefore contain descriptions of the role and impact of return migration, although return migration is never the central focus of the chapter and there are few hard data on the return migration streams in question. AS* Watson, J.L. "Chinese emigrant ties to the home community", New Communityf vol. 5, No. 4 (1977), pp. 343-352. About 60,000 Chinese live in Britain. This paper focuses on emigrants from one Hong Kong village, San Tin; 85-90% of working-age males in this community work in Chinese restaurants in the United Kingdom and other parts of western Europe. The village's economy is totally dependent on remittances. The 'classic pattern' of Chinese emigration involves close ties and an eventual triumphant return to the village as a wealthy person. Although this pattern has been changing in the 1970s, home ties are still strong. Chinese restaurant workers inhabit islands of Chinese culture and are the least assimilated of migrants of Britain; they are sojourners in an alien culture, working only for the day when they can return to retire in comfort to their own villages. Patterns and amounts of remittances are discussed: the 1970-71 average was 20-30 Pounds per month. The clearest evidence of emigrants' ties is the boom in house construction financed by them, replacing land as the traditional method of financial prestige. These 'sterling houses' now comprise a quarter of the houses in San Tin. They are two storeys high and much better equipped than traditional one-storey village houses. Migrants also put money into the village in the form of 'contribution drives' for schools and other public buildings. Early emigrants returned infrequently because of the expense and length of the sea trip. Now charter flights bring most migrants back every 3-5 years for a visit, usually coinciding with the Lunar New Year festival. Even on return visits (as opposed to permanent return stays) migrants participate fully in community life and are sought out by village elders for their opinions on important village decisions and affairs. Most return visits last about 3 months. Returnees bring gifts and are very free-spending on these visits. Some engage in gambling, risking their hard-won earnings. Another returnee obligation is to provide banquets for up to 800 people. Elaborate re-entry banquets mark the permanent return of migrants, as opposed to the visitors. Such extravagant behaviour may seem irrational to western eyes, but in fact they are a means of guaranteeing returnees* future security in the village. AS* Wellington, J.S. "Indonesian physicians studying abroad", Journal of Medical Education, vol. 43, No. 11 (1968), pp. 1183-1191. Wellington interviewed 36 medical lecturers in Indonesian universities who had had their postgraduate training in the US or Europe. They were a carefully selected group who had been given leave by their sponsoring departments only after agreeing to return to their teaching posts after completing their foreign training. Much of the article is about the utilisation of training after return and includes a catalogue of problems and complaints such as lack of recognition for innovation and enterprise, shortage of equipment, lazy students, etc. [0352W] J ,-> • , - 145 - AS Werth, M., Yalcintas, N. Migration and re-integratlon; transferability of the Turkish model of return migration and self-help organisations to other Mediterranean labour-exporting countries (Geneva, ILO, June 1978; mimeographed World Employment Programme Research working paper; restricted), 128 p. Paper on the impact of return migration on the labour market in Turkey. Considers the Turkish model of re-integration of the migrant worker as typical for Mediterranean countries of emigration, includes comparative analysis of migration for employment in Greece, Tunisia, Morocco, Algeria and Yugoslavia. WE* Werth, M. "Riickkehr- und Verbleibeabsichten tiirkischer Arbeitnehmer", in H. Korner and U. Mehrlander (eds.) Die "neue" Auslanderpolitik in Europa - Erfahrungen in den Aufnahme- und Entsendelandern (Bonn, Forschungsinstitut der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, 1986), pp. 121-138. WE Wichelmann, S. "Promoting re-integration in their developing countries of origin of professionals and skilled personnel trained in an industrialised country", International Migration, vol. 15, No. 2-3 (1977), pp. 236-242. Study on the policy of the Federal Republic of Germany to facilitate the return migration of professional and skilled personnel. Looks at the reintegration programme in Brazil undertaken from 1974 to 1976, and the professional and scientific vocational training in the Federal Republic of Germany. GE Widgren, J. AS Widmann, H. "Reintegration tiirkischer Migrantkinder, Bilanz Forschungsgreise", Bildung und Erziehungf vol. 3, No. 4 (1978), pp. 377-386. NC* Wiest R.E. Rural community development in Mexico: The impact of Mexican recurrent migration to the United States. University of Manitoba Anthropological Papers 21 (Winnipeg, 1978). GE* Wiest, R.E. "Anthropological perspectives on return migration: a critical commentary", Papers in Anthropology, vol. 20, No. 1 (1979), pp. 167-187. A series of anthropological papers is reviewed (many of them appearing in the same volume as this paper). The papers add to the growing evidence that return migration and remittances do not have a favourable impact on sending societies in terms of stimulation of production or distribution of products, and suggest that migratory labour is strategic for the maintenance of growth of industrial centres. Otherwise the papers break little new ground. Wiest makes the following specific recommendations: (1) More attention needs to be given to social class and social structure in the study of return migration; (2) the impact of non-migrants needs to be studied; (3) socio-economic change involves more than looking at social mobility; (4) high status emigration and return deserves more notice; (5) ideology as an element in migration decision-making is worth further investigation; (6) cyclical migration needs to be recognised as part of a wider global process of resource reallocation; (7) the exploitative nature of migrant labour should be more sharply defined. The migratory chain (Paris, OECD, 1977). einer - 146 - AF Wihtol de Wenden, C. "Le retour des travailleurs immigres en France dans leur pays d'origine", Die Dritte Weltf vol. 8, Nos. 3-4 (1980), pp. 291-305. WE Wihtol de Wenden-Didier, C. "Les orientations recentes de la politique francaise de retour, 1980-1981", L'emigration maghrebine en Europe. Exploitation ou cooperation (Alger, CREA, n.d.), pp. 315-329. WE Wihtol de Wenden-Didier, C. "Return migration in France and the Franco-Algerian agreement of 1980", in The politics of return. International return migration in Europe, ed. by D. Kubat (Rome, New York, Center for Migration Studies, 1984), pp. 171-174. Examines the different provisions of the agreement, as regards financial aid, occupational training, reintegration and aid to development. GE Wilder-Okladek, F. Research on return migration and the concept of "intention of permanence" in migratory theorvf paper presented at the International Sociological Association, Research Committee on Migration, University of Waterloo, Oct. 17-20, 1973 WE* Wilder-Okladek, F. The return movement of Jews to Austria after the second world war; with special consideration of the return from Israel (The Hague, Nijhoff, 1969). WE* Wilder-Okladek, F. "Analysis of 1970 survey of returned British migrants from Australia", in J. Zubrzycki (ed.) Enquiry into the Departure of Settlers from Australia (Canberra, Australian Government Publishing Service, 1973), pp. 67-69. Summary of results of a survey of 477 UK returnees from Australia. Data are given on respondents' age, sex and employment. Reasons for departure are grouped into two broad categories: reasons involving rejection of life in Australia; and non-rejection' motives. 59% gave 'non-rejection' reasons, mostly to do with personal, family and employment matters. The 41% who gave 'rejection' reasons stressed homesickness, loneliness, financial difficulties and dislike of the Australian way of life. 77% thought that they had made the right decision in returning. AS Wilpert, C. Returning and remaining - context and dynamics of decisions to return among Turkish migrants in Germany, paper presented at the First European Conference on International return migration (Rome, 11-14 Nov. 1981). GE* Wilpert, C. and Morokvasic, M. Bedingungen und Folgen internationaler Migration; Berichte aus Forschungen zu den Migrations-blographlen von Familien. Jugendlichen und Auslandischen Arbeiterinnen (Berlin, Institut fur Soziologie der Technischen Universitat Berlin, 1983), 316 p. This volume centres on the question of the 'Migration and future orientation of migrant families' (Wilpert). The attempt is made to analyse the orientation to return or to stay of Turkish and Yugoslav youth and their parents in function of subjective evaluations and objective conditions. WE* Wilson, J.A. and Gaston, J. "Reflux from the 'Brain Drain'", Minerva, vol. 12, No. 4, (1974), pp. 459-468. - 147 Early discussions on the brain drain of scientists revolved around two major issues: the cost of educating a scientist who subsequently emigrated; and the problems of building a scientific community in those countries denuded by brain drain. Little attention has been given to those scientists who did return. This paper is concerned with two questions: (1) what are the characteristics of returning scientists compared to non-returnees? (2) what factors relate to the decision to stay abroad or return? The data came from a 1964 survey of British and Irish scientists resident in North America and from a 1968 survey of 42 of those who had returned. Returnees tended to be the younger scientists, many of whom had gone to North America for PhD work and had never intended to stay there very long anyway. Returnees also tended to be lower paid (because of the age difference) and regarded themselves as less successful than the 'stayers', although they were better qualified (more had PhDs). Chemists tended to return, physicists to stay, whilst no engineers returned. The returnees came more from university jobs; the stayers were more in industry. Main reasons for return were ties to Britain and feelings of nationality, preference for the British way of life, ties to relatives and the wishes of wives to return. Rarely was the return related directly to employment opportunities in Britain, although 85% had obtained permanent employment on their return. Reservations about the return decision were expressed by many; 5% regretted the original migration decision to go to North America but 48% regretted returning. GE* NC Wiltshire, R. "Return migration to lagging regions: a bibliographic survey with special reference to North America and Europe", The Science Report of the Tohoku University (Geography), vol. 28, No. 1 (1978), pp. 87-99. A review of return migration literature rather narrowly confined to certain North American and European examples. Some interesting points are made in the conclusion. Wiltshire points out that studies of return migration have tended to stress the economic motive, a natural tendency given the success of economic models in predicting other forms of migration. As an economy advances the role of financial considerations in migration, and return migration, may decline. Analysis of social conditions is important. Wiltshire concludes that it is necessary to place return migration within an expanded framework for the analysis of regional economic development in relation to progress along the path to modernisation. WE Yap, K.S. Remieratie: een bildraee aan de economische ontwikkellng der herkomstlanden? (Den Haag, REMPLOD, 1975). WE Yugoslavia Contribution, Standing Conference of Institutes for the Promotion of Upbringing and Education in the S.F.R. of Yugoslavia, ILO Tripartite Technical Seminar on Second-Generation Migrants, Granada, 1982 (Geneva, 1982, IL0-RER/79/001/Sem.II/17.A), 14 p. Recommendations on education and social integration of second-generation immigrant children upon their returfn migration to Yugoslavia. Discusses language teaching in the mother tongue, psychological aspects, curriculum development, attainment appraisal, school guidance. AF Zehraoui, A. "La politique algerienne d'emigration et le retour des emigres", Pluriel, 19 (1979), pp. 45-68. WE Zehraoui, A. "Le retour: mythe ou realites?", Nord (1981), pp. 229-245. [0352W] Annuaire de l'Afrlque du - 148 - Sociological analysis of the return migration patterns in Algeria. The article focuses on the family aspects of emigration and return migration, and on the bilateral relations between Algeria and France. Zell, S. Puerto Rican migrants; a socio-economic study (San Juan, Puerto Rican Planning Board, 1972). Zell, S. A comparative study of the labour market characteristics of return migrants and non-migrants in Puerto Rico (San Juan, Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, 1973). Zidaric, V. Odgoino-obrazovnl rad na mater inskom leziku s diecom migranata kao ledan od preduv.leta za niihovu reintegraci.lu u domovini, (1977). Zingaro, R. "Re-integration of returnees in Andria", Migration Newsf vol. 18, no. 2 (1969), pp. 19-22. A brief account of a study of 57 return migrants in the town of Andria in Puglia, Southern Italy. All had been in the Federal Republic of Germany, leaving in the early 1960s and returning during 1965-67. Reasons for return are tabulated but the most interesting data are on employment: 44% returned to jobs in building and small-scale industry, 30% to agriculture, 14% to small businesses (shops, bars, etc.) and 12% to become craftsmen. Only 10% of those who had been unskilled before departure managed to move into skilled occupations upon return home. Investment was mostly in houses as a symbol of social advancement. Zubrzycki, J. Enquiry into the Departure of Settlers from Australia (Canberra, Australian Government Publishing Service, 1973), 117 p. This is the Final Report of the Committee on Social Patterns, headed by Zubrzycki, to the Australian Immigration Advisory Council. Three different mechanisms of estimating the proportion of immigrant settlers in Australia who returned to their countries of origin yielded remarkedly similar figures: the overall rate of settler loss during 1966-71 was between 22 and 24%, or an average of 37,000 returnees per year. The highest departure rates were for North America (73%), New Zealand (60%), Scandinavia and the Federal Republic of Germany (both 44%). Very low rates applied to Greece (8%), Asia (9%) and Yugoslavia (11%). The UK rate was about average (23%). Fewer females left than males. Single people are more likely to depart than families. A sub-sample survey indicated that about a quarter of returnees from Australia re-emigrate back again to Australia. The departure rate generally rises with employment status and skill level; the highest departure rate was for 'persons of independent means'. Reasons for departure are often complex but survey findings indicated a number of characteristic types, excluding dissatisfaction with Australia. Some of these types and motives were: highly-skilled and professional migrants who move back and forth as 'transilient' migrants; old people returning home; people committed to their homeland; homesickness; difficulty of integration (communication problems, lack of acceptance by the Australian community); medical problems; employment difficulties; housing shortage; and the status reduction involved in the migrant existence. A list of 18 recommendations is given to improve migrants' lives in Australia and perhaps reduce dissatisfaction and the rate of return. A series of separate contributions is contained in appendices.