1st Edition

The Effects Of Receiving Country Policies On Migration Flows

    303 Pages
    by Routledge

    303 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book deals with migrant-sending countries in the Western Hemisphere because that was the Commission's mandate and because the bulk of undocumented immigrants into the United States come from Mexico and other countries of the Caribbean Basin.

    Series Preface -- Introduction -- Policy-Based Assistance: A Historical Perspective -- U.S. Policy and the Caribbean Basin Sugar Industry: Implications for Migration -- The Impact of Maquiladoras on Migration in Mexico -- The Potential Effects of Labor-Intensive Agriculture in Mexico on U.S-Mexico Migration -- Development and Migration: A Comparative Analysis of Two Mexican Migrant Circuits -- The Role of Female Wage Earners in Male Migration in Guadalajara -- The Impact of IRCA on the Migration Patterns of a Community in Los Altos, Jalisco, Mexico -- Return Migration, Migrants’ Savings, and Sending Countries’ Economic Development: Lessons from Europe -- Development Assistance Strategies and Emigration Pressure in Europe and Africa -- Unauthorized Migration: An Economic Development Response

    Biography

    Sergio Díaz-Briquets is with Casals & Associates, a consulting firm in Washington, D.C. He was research director of the Commission for the Study of International Migration and Cooperative Economic Development, created by Congress. Earlier he held appointments with Duquesne University in Pittsburgh and with the Population Reference Bureau in Washington, D.C., and was a program officer with the International Development Research Centre (IDRC) in Ottawa, Canada. Diaz-Briquets has been a consultant to the U.S. Agency for International Development, the World Bank, and other international development agencies. Holder of a Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania, Diaz-Briquets is the author of several books on a variety of development-related topics, including The Health Revolution in Cuba (1983), and coauthor of Social Change and Internal Migration (1977). Most recently he edited Cuban Internationalism in Sub-Saharan Africa (1989). Sidney Weintraub is Dean Rusk Professor and director of the Program for U.S.-Mexico Policy Studies at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin. He is also a Distinguished Visiting Scholar at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS). As a career diplomat (1949–1975), he was an assistant administrator of the Agency for International Development, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for international finance and development, chief of the AID mission in Chile under the Alliance for Progress, and chief of commercial policy in the State Department. Dr. Weintraub also has authored numerous books and monographs focusing on Mexico-United States relations, including Mexican Trade Policy and the North American Community (1988), Industrial Strategy and Planning in Mexico and the United States (Westview, 1986), Free Trade Between Mexico and the United States? (1984), and A Marriage of Convenience: Relations Between Mexico and the United States (1990). He is coeditor with Luis F. Rubio and Alan D. Jones of U.S.-Mexican Industrial Integration (Westview, 1991).