17 research outputs found
Moving Beyond “China in Africa”: Insights from Zambian Immigration Data
China’s growing presence in Africa is not news: the expansion of bilateral trade and investment ties has garnered intense media and political focus over the past decade. However, less is known about the people accompanying these increasingly intensive flows of goods and capital. This paper focuses on Zambia, drawing on multiple primary datasets to shed light on both the scale and nature of Chinese migration to the continent. Two years of Department of Immigration employment-permit data serve as the basis for the first quantitative analysis of the “Chinese” in “Africa,” illuminating the increasing diversity of this population flow. While the growing Chinese presence in Africa is often viewed as a coherent neocolonialist strategy planned and implemented by the Chinese state, this paper demonstrates that it is in fact typified by a multitude of both public and private actors with independent motives
Records of Exclusion: Chinese Immigration in Historical Perspective
This dissertation re-centers the historical Chinese experience in the study of racial formation and immigration policy in the United States. The first major non-white immigrant group in the United States, Chinese communities in Western states were targeted by restrictive policies and violent backlash. Increasingly restrictive federal immigration policies culminated in the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act which laid the groundwork for the contemporary U.S. immigration system. Despite their relevance to important socioeconomic trends and political developments, historical Chinese immigrants have been largely excluded from quantitative social science research.
My dissertation attempts to remedy this longstanding omission. Chapter 1 introduces the historical facts and social importance of the Chinese case. Chapter 2 investigates pat- terns of residential segregation in pre-Exclusion California, demonstrating the importance of place in Chinese residential clustering. Chapter 3 – joint with Beth-Lew Williams – develops a database and typology of primary-source state and local policies targeting Chinese immigrants. Chapter 4 proposes a novel pre-processing technique to improve record linkage rates for historical Chinese populations. Chapter 5 concludes and outlines avenues of future research
Replication Data for: "Temporary Work Visas as US-Haiti Development Cooperation: A Preliminary Impact Evaluation"
This Stata 14 code replicates the figures and table in Clemens & Postel, "Temporary Work Visas as US-Haiti Development Cooperation: A Preliminary Impact Evaluation"
China in Africa - more than business?
Foreign investment and its weak impact on economic development is not a new reality in Africa. China’s growing investment has nonetheless come to be viewed as divergent from traditional interactions with African countries. This panel engages in new insights on China’s relations with Africa. Researchers present the paradigm of recent important inflows of Chinese migrants and their impact on local communities
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The Future of Mobility and Migration within and from Sub-Saharan Africa
African migration—its drivers, dynamics, and consequences—increasingly features in European and global policy debates.Through an examination of existing data on African mobility, this report argues there are few reasons to expect dramatic changes in the sources, directions, or nature of migration within and from sub-Saharan Africa. In the coming 30 years, economic inequality (within the continent and between Africa and Europe), climate change, persecution, and conflict will continue to encourage ever-diversifying movements to cities, to neighboring countries, and beyond Africa. The vast majority of those moving will stay within their countries of citizenship or move to neighboring countries; about one-fifth of sub-Saharan migrants will seek passage to Europe, Australasia, or North America. Although the proportion of Africans migrating internationally may not substantially increase in the decades ahead, the onset of the continent’s demographic boom will result in many more Africans on the move. Ironically, current development investments intended to sedentarize would-be migrants or reduce fertility (and hence the number of potential migrants) are only likely to intensify movements. For sub-Saharan African economies to absorb the surplus labor, African states would almost universally need to sustain two decades of economic growth at a pace previously unseen in global history.
Even if the general trends are likely to continue, three “second order” variables will influence the consequences of human mobility:
1. The degree of socio-spatial inequality within sub-Saharan Africa. Greater equality may limit movement while socio-spatial inequality will likely exacerbate migration.
2. Europe’s willingness to accept significant numbers of African migrants and the strategies pursued to regulate such movements. Recognizing that African incentives to enter Europe will remain strong, policies enabling movement will reduce the costs of doing so and the degree of violence, corruption, and organized crime associated with migration.
3. African state strategies to facilitate or control movements. These strategies—exercised at national, regional, or continental scales—will produce a number of externalities connected with political tensions, human rights abuses, and criminalization of public institutions and business within Africa and Europe.
The report ultimately outlines three plausible scenarios stemming from demographic, economic, and political variables. Within The Cosmopolitan Concord, European and African leaders promote openness in ways that limits corruption and violence while promoting socio-spatial equality and migrant inclusion. Europe’s openness to black Africans retains popular good will, investment opportunities, and European political influence. Under The Containment Compact, European and African leaders seek to limit mobility without countering heightening socio-spatial inequality. This results in widespread violence, criminalization, and conflict across Africa and into Europe. Underground migrant communities in Europe will be met by hostile, nationalist mobilizations. Finally, The Militerranean results from continued European closure to African migrants countered by African openness with moderate levels of inequality within Africa. While sub-Saharan Africa will face reduced violence and corruption, the Mediterranean will become militarized while Europe becomes an ideological battleground. Overt and organized political hostility to Europe by African political leaders leads to economic closure and declining European influence. European Political Strategy Centre, European Commissio