Defining migration policies from origin country perspective

  • Monica Serban PhD, Senior researcher associated with the Research Institute for Quality of Life, Romanian Academy, Bucharest, ROMANIA
Keywords: origin state, emigration, diaspora, return migration, migration policies

Abstract

The role state plays in international migration gathers more and more attention in migration studies, across different disciplines. Policies implemented in order to manage migration are a point of high interest in the space of destination countries. Yet, even though our knowledge from destination perspective has constantly increased, origin state is still under the shadow of a biased research agenda. We have little insights on the way migration policies at origin are built, enforced or on their effects on international movements. This paper addresses the gap, proposing a definition and a subsequent operationalization of migration policies at origin. Building on the few papers approaching the issue (de Haas & Vezzoli, 2011; Weinar, 2014), it advocates for a general definition, encompassing three fields of intervention: emigration, diaspora and return. The endeavour is part of a larger effort directed to evaluate migration policies in the case of origin liberal democratic states, origin of international migration, using policy on paper approach.

Published
2014-09-01
How to Cite
Serban, M. (2014) “Defining migration policies from origin country perspective”, Journal of Community Positive Practices, 14(3), pp. 65-78. Available at: http://jppc.ro/en/index.php/jppc/article/view/249 (Accessed: 3July2024).
Section
Articles