Introduction to the Special Issue on “Aging and Migration in Europe”

Isabelle Albert, D. Ferring, F. Lang
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Aging and migration have become key issues in many European societies today, as an unprecedented number of firstgeneration immigrants of the big immigration waves of the 1960s and 1970s are currently approaching retirement age.Originally, such migration to an economically prosperous country with better job opportunities was often associated with the expectation to return to the country of origin after some years of hard work – and after having accumulated enough wealth to restart a better life “back home.” While these expectations were often held equally by the receiving societies and by the migrants, they soon emerged as the so-called “myth of return” (see e.g., Bolognani, 2007). In fact, while only a small proportion of immigrants permanently returns to their countries of origin, even after longer periods abroad (see e.g., Baykara-Krumme, 2013, for a discussion of Turkish immigrants in several European countries), a large proportion of aging immigrants intend to stay in their receiving countries after retirement or to commute between the country of origin and the host country, a trend demonstrated for various immigrant groups in several European countries (see, e.g., Attias-Donfut, Tessier, and Wolff, 2005, aswell asDeCoulon&Wolff, 2005, for international immigrants in France; Bolzmann, Fibbi, & Viol, 2006, for Italian and Spanish immigrants in Switzerland).
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“欧洲的老龄化与移民”特刊简介
随着20世纪60年代和70年代大移民浪潮中数量空前的第一代移民目前接近退休年龄,老龄化和移民已成为当今许多欧洲社会的关键问题。最初,这种移民到经济繁荣的国家,有更好的工作机会,往往与期望在几年的努力工作后返回原籍国有关-在积累了足够的财富后重新开始更好的生活“回家”。虽然这些期望通常被接收社会和移民平等地持有,但它们很快就成为所谓的“回归神话”(例如,Bolognani, 2007)。事实上,尽管只有一小部分移民在国外待了较长时间后永久返回原籍国(参见Baykara-Krumme, 2013年对几个欧洲国家的土耳其移民的讨论),但很大一部分老年移民打算在退休后留在接收国,或在原籍国和东道国之间往返,这一趋势在几个欧洲国家的各种移民群体中都有体现(参见,例如:Attias-Donfut, Tessier, and Wolff, 2005,以及decoulon&wolff, 2005,关于法国的国际移民;Bolzmann, Fibbi, & Viol, 2006,针对瑞士的意大利和西班牙移民)。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
30
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