socio-economic, family and cultural patterns of stability and change in Turkey and Europe /
Ayse Guveli, Harry Ganzeboom, Lucinda Platt, Bernhard Nauk, Helen Baykara-Krumme, Sebnem Eroglu, Sait Bayrakdar, Efe K. Sözeri, Niels Spierings
1 online resource (xiii, 284 pages) :
illustrations
Includes bibliographical references and index
Cover ; Half-Title ; Title; Copyright; Contents; List of Figures; List of Tables; Acknowledgements; Part I ; 1 Introduction: The Origins of Migration ; 2 Research Design and Data ; 3 The Five Regions of Origin in Turkey ; 4 Migration and Return Migration ; Part II ; 5 Educational Attainment ; 6 Occupational Status Attainment
7 Self-Employment Part III ; 8 Marriage ; 9 Fertility ; 10 Friends and Social Networks ; Part IV ; 11 Religiosity ; 12 Attitudes towards Gender Equality ; 13 Identities ; Part V ; 14 Conclusion ; Appendices ; Notes ; References ; Index
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"Migration is a life-changing experience not only for the migrants themselves but also for those left behind. Using a novel 'origins of migration' approach, this fascinating book reveals the true impact of migration across multiple aspects of migrants' lives by comparing three generations of Turkish migrants to Europe to their non-migrant counterparts in Turkey. Working with unique and exciting information on 2000 Turkish families and their 50,000 family members, the authors examine three generations-worth of complex migration trajectories and dense webs of transnational connections, taking in migration, settlement, return migration, friendships, marriages and visits. They evaluate change and continuity over 50 years, from the first labour migration of the 1960s to the present. Whilst in socio-economic terms migrants have gained from migration, and their attitudes and practices show some adjustment to the European context, the picture also reveals substantial continuity with their peers who remained in their country of origin. "--
Intergenerational consequences of migration.
9781137501417
Immigrants-- Family relationships-- Europe
Turks-- Family relationships-- Europe
Turkey, Emigration and immigration, Social aspects