Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research (AISSR)

An Introduction to International Migration Studies: European Perspectives

Edited by Marco Martiniello and Jan Rath

This second volume in the IMISCOE Textbook Series, intended for advanced students of international migration, presents theoretical and empirical perspectives on a range of central topics. Its main focus is on European experiences, including Eastern Europe, thus filling a longstanding gap in the field.

Cover textbook

Unlike people, theories and concepts do not travel easily. This means that scholarship oriented towards the United States and other countries with longer, older narratives of immigration is not necessarily applicable everywhere.

The first IMISCOE Textbook answered the pressing need for a European perspective on migration. This second volume continues the tradition, offering insights on theoretical perspectives, types of migration and regulation of migration in an accessible textbook format. 

What the experts are saying 

"The IMISCOE network includes many of the world's foremost immigration scholars. The crème de la crème of them have contributed to this extraordinarily valuable book, which I will be assigning to my students for years to come."

– Mark J. Miller, University of Delaware and author of The Age of Migration

"Anchored in the European experience of post-war migration, but with essays that extend far beyond, readers will benefit from up-to-date and reflective works on the key topics in the field."

– Robin Cohen, University of Oxford

"A superb introduction to international migration studies." 

– Joaquín Arango, Complutense University of Madridtomics 

Contents 

1. An introduction to international migration studies: European perspectives (Marco Martiniello and Jan Rath). 2. Beyond ‘push-pull’: The economic approach to modelling migration (Dragos Radu and Thomas Straubhaar).  3. Historical-structural models of international migration (Ewa Morawska). 4. Social networks and international migration (Monica Boyd and Joanne Nowak). 5. Transnational migration (Eva Østergaard-Nielsen). 6. Jus sanguinis  and jus soli: Aspects of ethnic migration and immigration policies in EU states (Eftihia Voutira). 7. Migration and social transformation (Stephen Castles). 8. Guest worker migration in post-war Europe, 1946-1974: An analytical appraisal (Ahmet Akgündüz). 9. Skilled migration in Europe and beyond: Recent developments and theoretical considerations (Aimee Kuvik). 10. Environmental migration (François Gemenne). 11. Student migration (Russell King and Allan Findlay). 12. Sunset migration (Russell King). 13. Undocumented migration: An explanatory framework (Joanne van der Leun and Maria Ilies). 14. Whither EU immigration and asylum after the Lisbon Treaty? (Elspeth Guild). 15. The regulation of undocumented migration (Giuseppe Sciortino). 

Published by  AISSR

24 January 2013