This dissertation focuses on a systematic comparison of the process of U.S.-bound migration from Nicaragua and Cuba. A number of key issues are explored, including: the historical determinants of the respective exoduses; migration trends; the sociodemographic characteristics of the migrants; the contexts of reception for both groups; their modes of incorporation into the receiving society (emphasizing the Miami labor market); the emergence of transnational networks between the sending societies and the United States; and the transnational activities developed by the migrants, particularly economic transnationalism among Nicaraguans.Contrasting these two migration processes resulting from major revolutions in the Western hemisphere, this stu...
This thesis explores Nicaraguan migration to Costa Rica as part of a basic employment strategy used ...
The text is a summary of research and didactics related to migration phenomena in Latin America, car...
In the aftermath of 1959, Cuban citizens ’ social behaviour became subject to political interpretati...
In Central America, Nicaragua is the only country with a clearly bipolar behavior regard...
Popular notions about migration to the United States from Latin America and the Caribbean are too of...
The issue of whether Central Americans in the United States are ‘ political ’ or ‘economic’ migrants...
This dissertation deals with three aspects of Latin America - US migration dynamics using data from ...
Since 1959, Cuban emigration seems to have been the subject of two consensuses. First, the Cuban Rev...
Since 1959, Cuban emigration seems to have been the subject of two consensuses. First, the Cuban Rev...
Popular notions about migration to the United States from Latin America and the Caribbean are too of...
International migration has grown in both scope and scale in recent decades. Almost half of the worl...
This paper examines the circumstances in which Nicaraguan migrants to Costa Rica found themselves an...
Data from the Latin American Migration Project (LAMP) and the Mexican Migration Project (MMP) is com...
nternational migration is one of the defining features of the history of Latin America and the Carib...
This dissertation is a social history of the approximately 200,000 individuals who migrated seasonal...
This thesis explores Nicaraguan migration to Costa Rica as part of a basic employment strategy used ...
The text is a summary of research and didactics related to migration phenomena in Latin America, car...
In the aftermath of 1959, Cuban citizens ’ social behaviour became subject to political interpretati...
In Central America, Nicaragua is the only country with a clearly bipolar behavior regard...
Popular notions about migration to the United States from Latin America and the Caribbean are too of...
The issue of whether Central Americans in the United States are ‘ political ’ or ‘economic’ migrants...
This dissertation deals with three aspects of Latin America - US migration dynamics using data from ...
Since 1959, Cuban emigration seems to have been the subject of two consensuses. First, the Cuban Rev...
Since 1959, Cuban emigration seems to have been the subject of two consensuses. First, the Cuban Rev...
Popular notions about migration to the United States from Latin America and the Caribbean are too of...
International migration has grown in both scope and scale in recent decades. Almost half of the worl...
This paper examines the circumstances in which Nicaraguan migrants to Costa Rica found themselves an...
Data from the Latin American Migration Project (LAMP) and the Mexican Migration Project (MMP) is com...
nternational migration is one of the defining features of the history of Latin America and the Carib...
This dissertation is a social history of the approximately 200,000 individuals who migrated seasonal...
This thesis explores Nicaraguan migration to Costa Rica as part of a basic employment strategy used ...
The text is a summary of research and didactics related to migration phenomena in Latin America, car...
In the aftermath of 1959, Cuban citizens ’ social behaviour became subject to political interpretati...