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Posts by Migration Studies

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How do migrants engage politically across borders? Using survey data from Switzerland, @I. Pap, @V. Petrović, and @J. Rössel show that political participation in countries of residence and origin can coexist, but varies depending on political attention and news consumption.

doi.org/10.1093/migr...

1 day ago 2 1 0 0
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How do immigrants claim belonging in ethnically defined societies? In Czechia, @R. Klvanova and @I.V. Božič show how Slovak, Vietnamese, and MENA migrants draw on distinct cultural repertoires, producing hierarchies of belonging shaped by mulitple factors.

#OpenAccess
doi.org/10.1093/migr...

5 days ago 1 0 0 0
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Do labour market penalties persist across immigrant generations? Using Spanish Labour Force Survey data, @J. Muñoz-Comet and @A. Feixas show that most first-generation penalties fade, pointing to assimilation, while access penalties increase for certain groups.

#OpenAccess
doi.org/10.1093/migr...

1 week ago 1 0 0 1
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What makes a place a transit space in migration journeys?Based on fieldwork in Necoclí, Colombia, @C. Broussy shows how transit is not a fixed category but a lived, socially and affectively produced space, shaped by practices, local actors, and overlapping governance regimes

doi.org/10.1093/migr...

1 week ago 2 2 0 0
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What shapes public support for hosting migrants? Based on a survey experiment in Catalonia, @Raül Tormos and Toni Rodon show strong preference for refugees over economic migrants, especially Ukrainians, and a reversal of the NIMBY effect, with greater support for local settlement.

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1 week ago 1 0 0 1
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How does cinema shape how we see refugee vulnerability? Examining Turkish films on Syrian refugees, @F. Serdaroğlu shows how cinema makes vulnerability perceptible, unsettles dominant ways of seeing, and opens space for more inclusive visual engagement.

doi.org/10.1093/migr...

4 weeks ago 1 1 0 0
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How do refugees navigate and reshape the EU’s geopolitics of asylum? Drawing on fieldwork in Greece, @G.Mavrommatis shows how refugees enact their geopolitics in practice, exercising freedom as possibility within and against restrictive EU and national regimes.

#OpenAccess
doi.org/10.1093/migr...

1 month ago 3 3 0 0
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How do South Asian parents balance gender equality and safety in student migration? Studying expatriate families in the UAE, @A. M. Paul and @S. A. Parwani show daughters study abroad as often as sons, yet parents still manage risks through gendered choices.

#OpenAccess
doi.org/10.1093/migr...

2 months ago 0 0 0 0
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How does US immigration enforcement treat pregnant migrants? @qabila.bsky.social and @M. Téllez show how detention policies under both parties render them disposable, exposing how profit extraction and racialized control persist even under claims of humanitarian exception.

doi.org/10.1093/migr...

2 months ago 0 1 0 0
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Why do similar refugee aid deals diverge? Comparing the Jordan and Ethiopia Jobs Compacts, @S.Almasri and @A.A.Nigusie show how contrasting political strategies shaped employment reforms, showing that rapid reforms do not always lead to sustainable refugee self-reliance.

doi.org/10.1093/migr...

3 months ago 0 0 0 0
Screenshot of the abstract of the article, "Una Mujer Embarazada necesita el sol": Pregnant migrant women, carceral capitalism, and immigration enforcement at the US-Mexico border, by Amanda Heffernan and Michelle Téllez, in Migration Studies, Volume 14, Issue 1, March 2026. 

Abstract full text: The US immigration detention and deportation system is a vector for state violence against criminalized, racialized populations, in service to racial capitalism. The immigration policies of both Democrats and Republicans are designed to extract profit from migrants, disciplining them as a deportable underclass of workers while minimizing and externalizing the costs of social reproduction. The detention of pregnant women presents the immigration enforcement system with both discursive and material challenges, as detaining pregnant women entails additional potential costs and exposes the system to public critique on humanitarian grounds. Through an analysis of the experiences of detained pregnant women at the US/Mexico border, we argue that federal immigration policy in USA renders pregnant migrant women disposable and expendable, even during administrations that purport to make humanitarian exceptions for them. We describe and analyze processes of profit extraction, externalization of social reproduction, and symbolic exploitation in relation to the detention of pregnant women from the last year of the Obama administration in 2016 through 2022. Our findings demonstrate that recent Democratic and Republican administrations alike mobilize discursive and material practices to neutralize the challenge embodied by pregnant detainees, preserving and protecting an ever-expanding and privatized immigration enforcement system while causing profound harm to pregnant women and their families.

Screenshot of the abstract of the article, "Una Mujer Embarazada necesita el sol": Pregnant migrant women, carceral capitalism, and immigration enforcement at the US-Mexico border, by Amanda Heffernan and Michelle Téllez, in Migration Studies, Volume 14, Issue 1, March 2026. Abstract full text: The US immigration detention and deportation system is a vector for state violence against criminalized, racialized populations, in service to racial capitalism. The immigration policies of both Democrats and Republicans are designed to extract profit from migrants, disciplining them as a deportable underclass of workers while minimizing and externalizing the costs of social reproduction. The detention of pregnant women presents the immigration enforcement system with both discursive and material challenges, as detaining pregnant women entails additional potential costs and exposes the system to public critique on humanitarian grounds. Through an analysis of the experiences of detained pregnant women at the US/Mexico border, we argue that federal immigration policy in USA renders pregnant migrant women disposable and expendable, even during administrations that purport to make humanitarian exceptions for them. We describe and analyze processes of profit extraction, externalization of social reproduction, and symbolic exploitation in relation to the detention of pregnant women from the last year of the Obama administration in 2016 through 2022. Our findings demonstrate that recent Democratic and Republican administrations alike mobilize discursive and material practices to neutralize the challenge embodied by pregnant detainees, preserving and protecting an ever-expanding and privatized immigration enforcement system while causing profound harm to pregnant women and their families.

How does immigration policy intersect with reproductive oppression in the United States? Proud to share our new article exploring the experiences of pregnant people detained, excluded or expelled by US immigration enforcement from 2017-2022. @migrationjrnl.bsky.social

doi.org/10.1093/migr...

3 months ago 7 5 0 0
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Do economic conditions shape anti-immigrant attitudes in non-Western contexts? Using survey data from Japan, @M. Aikawa finds that while opposition peaked during economic downturns, macro and individual economic indicators only partly explain shifting attitudes.

#OpenAccess
doi.org/10.1093/migr...

3 months ago 1 0 0 0
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In our latest issue, @J.Diab explores how class shapes displacement in Lebanon after the Israel–Hezbollah escalation. The study shows wealthier families preserved comfort, while poorer households faced overcrowding and deepened precarity revealing a class-contingent process.

doi.org/10.1093/migr...

3 months ago 1 1 0 0
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How does urban resilience in refugee governance work under centralised rule? @ricardzapata.bsky.social shows that in Turkey it often stabilises power rather than transforms it by reinforcing loyalty, adaptation, and continuity. A sharp rethink of the “local turn": doi.org/10.1093/migr...

4 months ago 2 1 0 0
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Urban resilience in Turkish refugee governance: Loyalty, adaptation, and continuity Abstract. This article examines how cities mobilize resilience as a regulatory principle in migration governance, focusing on their capacity to act under s

Urban resilience in Turkish refugee governance: Loyalty, adaptation, and continuity url: academic.oup.com/migration/ar...

4 months ago 4 2 0 0
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How does China manage the transition from education to skilled migration? A. Zi Wang shows that while China offers inclusive higher education access, especially for students from the Global South, significant structural barriers hinder their transition into the labour market.
doi.org/10.1093/migr...

4 months ago 1 1 0 0
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How do local actors navigate and enforce restrictive migration policies? T. Øland examines Denmark’s integration workers, showing how they function as “fiery soul” bureaucrats who both reinforce state-imposed restrictions and create space for care, order, and ethical agency.

doi.org/10.1093/migr...

4 months ago 0 0 0 0
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What determines long-term outcomes for return migrants in rural settings? Drawing on surveys, Sugden et al. show that return outcomes are deeply shaped by ongoing patterns of agrarian differentiation.

doi.org/10.1093/migr...

5 months ago 1 0 0 0
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How do internally displaced children born during captivity in Uganda navigate post-war life? Drawing on interviews and art-making, @M.Denov and @O.Alexandrakis use the concept of #wayfinding to show how shared memory and imagination shape belonging and agentive future-making.
doi.org/10.1093/migr...

5 months ago 1 0 0 0
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What drives host states to adopt inclusive migration policies? Daniel Rojas , Alfredo Trejo, Margaret Peters, and Yang-Yang Zhou show how border pragmatism, economic benefits, and reputational gains drove Colombia’s inclusive response to Venezuelan migration.

#OpenAccess
doi.org/10.1093/migr...

6 months ago 2 0 0 0

We've expanded our Editorial Team: @aalrababah.bsky.social has joined as a new associate editor! Ala is in the Department of Social and Political Sciences at Bocconi University, focusing on migration and political violence using experiments and computational methods. Welcome to the journal!

6 months ago 4 0 0 0

Spreading the word via @imiscoe.bsky.social @enmisa.bsky.social @migcitizenapsa.bsky.social @ecpr-migration.bsky.social @tsourapas.bsky.social

6 months ago 0 0 0 0

All topics welcome! Each SI will bring together up to 15 articles, with an introduction that frames key themes, debates, and contributions to migration studies. We particularly encourage initiatives led by or including scholars from the Global South, Global East, and non-anglophone regions.

6 months ago 0 1 1 0
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2025 Call for Special Issue Proposals Deadline: 15 December 2025 Migration Studies is now accepting Special Issue proposals. The journal typically publishes one call for special issues pe

Our call for Special Issues is now live! We welcome collections that advance theoretical debates, offer comparative insight, and push methodological boundaries. Deadline: 15 December 2025. Questions: get in touch with @mkoinova.bsky.social. Details: academic.oup.com/migration/pa...

6 months ago 4 6 1 1
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Why do #subnational units restrict internal migration? Based on fieldwork in Batam, Indonesia, Isabelle Côté proposes the 'IM+IGE' framework to show how institutions, geography, and elites shape local responses to internal migration.

#OpenAccess
doi.org/10.1093/migr...

6 months ago 0 0 0 0
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How do social networks shape migrants’ platform work? Studying food couriers in Norway, Maizi Hua introduces “copy-paste paths” to show how migrants replicate strategies through networks, supporting mobility and integration alongside risks like peer pressure and exploitation.
doi.org/10.1093/migr...

7 months ago 2 1 0 0
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Is irregular migration really a recent phenomenon? Drawing on colonial archives, Y. Benhadda traces #lhrig, a Maghrebi term for irregular border crossing, back to colonial Morocco, challenging dominant narratives of crisis and unprecedentedness in today’s migration debates.

doi.org/10.1093/migr...

7 months ago 7 2 0 0
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About Migration Studies is a peer-reviewed, online-only journal dedicated to advancing the understanding of human mobility in all its forms. We welcome research on th

The report is available on our "About the Journal" page here under "Annual Report": academic.oup.com/migration/pa...

7 months ago 2 0 0 0

We really couldn’t do this without the tremendous work and support of our current editorial team, advisory board members, and conscientious reviewers. Looking ahead, we have lots on our agenda: Open Science, widening our audiences, exploring new submission formats… Keep an eye out in the future!

7 months ago 0 0 1 0

Our Impact Factor rose to 2.7, firmly in the top-quartile of Demography-indexed journals. We accepted about 1-in-5 special issue proposals on topics like “living with difference in cities” and “unusual places of sanctuary and refuge.”

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