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Motives of Mobility, Drivers of Displacement ꟷ 2 Case Studies

Conflict
Development
Governance
Migration
Quantitative
Regression
Asylum
Causality
S204
András Tétényi
Corvinus University of Budapest
Jörn Grävingholt
German Institute of Development and Sustainability (IDOS)
Jörn Grävingholt
German Institute of Development and Sustainability (IDOS)

Building: (Building A) Faculty of Law, Administration & Economics , Floor: 4th floor, Room: 418

Friday 15:50 - 17:30 CEST (06/09/2019)

Abstract

Current asylum and migration policies tend to assume a categorical distinction between refugees fleeing an untenable physical threat and “economic” migrants seeking new opportunities. Yet recent research has shown that most migratory movements and even individual decisions represent a mix of motives and that various individual and circumstantial factors play a role. This panel brings together a set of papers that delve deeper into understanding why people move in the first place, why they move on, and which of these factors are open to policy interventions while in other cases policies need to address primarily the social, economic, human and other consequences of mobility. Recent research into motives and drivers of human mobility has begun to address the issue with a diversity of methods (quantitative and qualitative) and approaches (cross-country and at individual level). In order to advance our understanding of motives of mobility and drivers of displacement, these two panels include both theoretical and empirical approaches and combine papers that employ quantitative and qualitative research methods at different levels of analysis. The first panel and its papers focus cross-country analysis, while the second panel focuses more on case studies.

Title Details
Stay, Return or Move On: Involuntary Immobility and Future Imaginations of Syrian Forced Migrants in Beirut and Tripoli View Paper Details
Refuge in 'a Country Like Our Own': Explaining Spaces of Integration in the Case of Syrian Refugees in Turkey View Paper Details
Information and Communication Technologies and Decision-Making among Forcibly Displaced People: Empirical Analysis from Kenya View Paper Details
Balkan Mobility View Paper Details