Labor Mobility of the Chinese Graduates from British and Spanish Universities: What Happens to the "Talent Migration"?

dc.contributor.author
Jasiewicz, Joanna
dc.date.accessioned
2014-10-14T11:15:35Z
dc.date.accessioned
2020-11-09T16:20:26Z
dc.date.available
2014-10-14T11:15:35Z
dc.date.available
2020-11-09T16:20:26Z
dc.date.created
2013-05
dc.date.issued
2013-05
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/2072/240811
dc.description.abstract
The scholarship on migration in Europe heavily focuses on the integration of economically vulnerable migrants. In the age of commercialization of education, however, the European Union attracts a rising number of highly skilled non-EU migrants that take up studies across the continent. Despite economic downturn, the EU universities experience a rapid growth in the number of Chinese students, many of whom settle in Europe upon graduation. Surprisingly, although the number of Chinese students in the EU increases, scholars largely ignore the labor paths that these highly skilled migrants take upon graduating from European universities. This study aims to fill this gap by exploring the variation in the Chinese graduates’ labor incorporation patterns and in their spatial mobility. In this project, I also examine macro-level hypotheses predicting that the EU and host states’ labor market institutions, changes in the EU policies on the highly skilled and the outburst of economic crisis matter for the Chinese highly skilled social and spatial mobility. Seizing on surveys, interviews and on the bodies of literature on stratification and social mobility, economic incorporation, social capital and human capital, I look at the Chinese students that graduated from universities in Great Britain and Spain. These states differ in the university tuition fees, migration policies towards the highly skilled workers and in the period of the Chinese students’ influx, thus providing an economically and socially diverse sample. My research will contribute to the literature on the relations between migrants’ social mobility, class and status background and spatial mobility, at the same time adding a transnational level perspective to the study of highly skilled Asian migration.
eng
dc.format.extent
34 p.
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dc.language.iso
eng
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dc.publisher
Institut Barcelona d'Estudis Internacionals
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dc.relation.ispartofseries
IBEI Working Papers;2013/36
dc.rights
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.rights
L'accés als continguts d'aquest document queda condicionat a l'acceptació de les condicions d'ús establertes per la següent llicència Creative Commons: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/3.0/es/
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RECERCAT (Dipòsit de la Recerca de Catalunya)
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Mobilitat laboral
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dc.subject.other
Mobilitat laboral -- Àsia
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dc.subject.other
Mobilitat laboral -- Xina
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dc.subject.other
Mobilitat obligada per treball
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dc.subject.other
Mobilitat professional
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dc.subject.other
Migracions
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dc.title
Labor Mobility of the Chinese Graduates from British and Spanish Universities: What Happens to the "Talent Migration"?
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dc.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/workingPaper
cat
dc.subject.udc
31
cat
dc.subject.udc
32
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dc.subject.udc
331
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dc.embargo.terms
cap
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