New dynamics of multinational migration : Chinese and Indian migrants in Singapore and Los Angeles
The emerging literature on multinational migration highlights migratory journeys that involve more than one country of destination. This article focuses on the lived experiences of new Chinese and Indian migrants in Singapore and Los Angeles. We conduct a novel three‐way comparison to examine person...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1444932023-03-05T15:32:31Z New dynamics of multinational migration : Chinese and Indian migrants in Singapore and Los Angeles Zhan, Shaohua Aricat, Rajiv Zhou, Min School of Social Sciences Social sciences::Sociology Chinese Migrant Multinational Migration The emerging literature on multinational migration highlights migratory journeys that involve more than one country of destination. This article focuses on the lived experiences of new Chinese and Indian migrants in Singapore and Los Angeles. We conduct a novel three‐way comparison to examine personal choices to engage in additional migration(s) and to consider the reasons behind such moves. Drawing on in‐depth interviews and analyses of policy documents, we find that new, especially skilled, migrants from China and India actively participate in multinational migration. However, variations exist between these two national origin groups and between the two global cities. Factors affecting decisions about whether and where to further migrate include immigration policy of the host country, job opportunities, homeland economic development, and migration networks. Singapore regulates migrants' long‐term settlement more tightly than does the United States; thus, migrants in the former are more likely than the latter to move onward to another country. Due to a more robust economy in the homeland, Chinese migrants are more likely to return and are thus less likely to migrate to a third country than their Indian counterparts. Job opportunities and migration networks also have strong effects on personal decisions concerning additional migration(s). Ministry of Education (MOE) Accepted version This work was supported by an Academic Research Fundtier 2 grant from the Ministry of Education of Singapore(MOE2015-T2-2-027). 2020-11-09T05:46:06Z 2020-11-09T05:46:06Z 2020 Journal Article Zhan, S., Aricat, R., & Zhou, M. (2020). New dynamics of multinational migration : Chinese and Indian migrants in Singapore and Los Angeles. Geographical Research, 58(4), 365-376. doi:10.1111/1745-5871.12397 1745-5863 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144493 10.1111/1745-5871.12397 2-s2.0-85087749281 4 58 365 376 en MOE2015-T2-2-027 Geographical Research © 2020 Institute of Australian Geographers. All rights reserved. This paper was published by Wiley in Geographical Research and is made available with permission of Institute of Australian Geographers. application/pdf |
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Social sciences::Sociology Chinese Migrant Multinational Migration Zhan, Shaohua Aricat, Rajiv Zhou, Min New dynamics of multinational migration : Chinese and Indian migrants in Singapore and Los Angeles |
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The emerging literature on multinational migration highlights migratory journeys that involve more than one country of destination. This article focuses on the lived experiences of new Chinese and Indian migrants in Singapore and Los Angeles. We conduct a novel three‐way comparison to examine personal choices to engage in additional migration(s) and to consider the reasons behind such moves. Drawing on in‐depth interviews and analyses of policy documents, we find that new, especially skilled, migrants from China and India actively participate in multinational migration. However, variations exist between these two national origin groups and between the two global cities. Factors affecting decisions about whether and where to further migrate include immigration policy of the host country, job opportunities, homeland economic development, and migration networks. Singapore regulates migrants' long‐term settlement more tightly than does the United States; thus, migrants in the former are more likely than the latter to move onward to another country. Due to a more robust economy in the homeland, Chinese migrants are more likely to return and are thus less likely to migrate to a third country than their Indian counterparts. Job opportunities and migration networks also have strong effects on personal decisions concerning additional migration(s). |
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School of Social Sciences |
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School of Social Sciences Zhan, Shaohua Aricat, Rajiv Zhou, Min |
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Article |
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Zhan, Shaohua Aricat, Rajiv Zhou, Min |
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Zhan, Shaohua |
title |
New dynamics of multinational migration : Chinese and Indian migrants in Singapore and Los Angeles |
title_short |
New dynamics of multinational migration : Chinese and Indian migrants in Singapore and Los Angeles |
title_full |
New dynamics of multinational migration : Chinese and Indian migrants in Singapore and Los Angeles |
title_fullStr |
New dynamics of multinational migration : Chinese and Indian migrants in Singapore and Los Angeles |
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New dynamics of multinational migration : Chinese and Indian migrants in Singapore and Los Angeles |
title_sort |
new dynamics of multinational migration : chinese and indian migrants in singapore and los angeles |
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2020 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144493 |
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