THE v URBAN A RGE Nih7-ee Spr,ttQ 1994 I NT E R NAT I O NAL M I G RATI O N AN D C IT I E S The Age of International Migration IN THIS ISSUE /sv Stepliicit C,istcies ittd Mirk,i. MWiller I The Age of International Migration by .Stephen Castles and Mal-kJr t'iller The year 1994 hla already witniessed niatty dramatic sttrld ecents. These, and many other global o Exiting Hong Kong: Social I lardships for thie people of Sarajev o contittue despite tlte Utiited ittcidenits. are directly liniked to Class and Adjusting to 1997 by Nationss-spotsorcd cease fire The conflict in the rains of the fortner intemational migration and the central Janet Saloff and Wong Sua-Ion Yugoslavia has displaced over 4 million people. and less than I5 role of cities. They also illustrate the 7 Canada's Golden Mountain: perceits sf the displaced hase fronnd refLige outside its bartered bottod- problems of people of diverse culsLires Closing the Gates? by aries Many have sonught precarious havens tn besieged cttics ltke and social condittons trving to lix .cprodicia A. Laau/an Sarajer o and Tuzla. The fears of people seeking safety in these cittes togethler. The last decade of the 8 El Salvador: Impacts of Internationat Migration on arc heightetted by the mnciace oif furthcr cthnic cleansing--the twentieth century and the first otf the Cities by Mario Lango purposeful use of vioslettce and ten-or tos nd an at-ea of an unwa.ntscl tscsnty-first arc ihkely to be deesned 1( Overseas Emigration Helps population. A contittettt asway, brutaal ethniic cleansisng coititlies as the "the age ofniigration." Reform Hanoi by Robert 1.. swisrld satchcs horrifi,ng scenes from Kigali and clseav here in Rssanda, Intermational migration is not an Bach and Duong Bach Ir swhere as many as haIlfa ntillon pcople save lost thcir lives in tnter- tnrention of the late twentieth ceoi- 12 Migration and Urbantzation. A ethnic cosiflict tury tnigrations have beest part of Glimpse of the Gulf by Vasro haman hisstury At Shah and Sakhd-os A4 Shah from the earliest Once the 14 Trans-aeban Migration-Sooth times. Ov'r the Africa as a Test Bed by past five htindred Ahd-AMaliq Sieno-e years, mass lb6 Forced Migration in the Forner migratton s have S., iet Union bs Atthar C played a nmajssor He/ro,n role in colonial- 17 Migration Trends in Central ism, indtastriatizae and Easter Enrope byU arch tioni. urbaniza- lion. tle emer- 20 Migration aitd Cities in genceres ofnation- rdcu toGermany by Joto.. B/esschke NatralzaionSe Ic stoenfrce' lol te Le~ stte ar d the states, and the IMbHI d - ~~~development of Umted civist 2 Letters to the Editor world market. - -, Huswes er. ~~~~~~~~~~~~3 World View International d,[nbea inen atioi o rd Migration and the Post- isBo thA ,UrIited intens attotta Industrial Crity by S,7tka r r ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~ er ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ l, m.iiigration has Sasse,n - n-s ci', ~l, never been as 13 Communities Speak Stirring I ii pervasive, or as the French Melting Pot by - ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~ ~~~ socio-economi- 5Mvr'ni Colg mne r fl ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~cally and politi- 15MyrsClm Across the Atlantic. anisther kind ot siege menitality has, developed. cally significant. as it is today. Never IS8 Newsline The U.N.. Popula- Ratifitcation of tlte Northl American Free Tradie Aeureernent /NAFTA/ before thas interitational migration tion Conference- A Presiew Protmises to redLoCe unauthorized migration to the United States osver the seemed so pertinent so national by 1ai n/a Sorib IOIg rLin. But, in tlse short and inedium tertn, it is unclear svhether it secarity and so connected to contlics 21 From the Ciry Manager's st Ill increase or reduce the illegal in-floss sit migrants that has sparked and dissirder ion a gltibal scale It is Ds caustic atid pittartzing sdebates. In any case, she U.S. Immnigration atid( virtually certaiis that cities and tiation- 22 Books and Resources Nasoralizatton Sort-ice coistinoes to enforce "Operatioti IloId the Line" states arouind the world st ill be 23 The Urban Calendar alonig the biorder hetsseen the Mexican cit-Y osfCiucdad Juaree and the itacreasingly affected by internattional United States city of El Paso. Texas. This effort hia, increased the mnigration, either as receiving or sending areas, or both. itiunber atid concentrmtiott of border patrol agents to deter illegal eiitrs itito the Usiited States front Mexico. ~,iotiacd is part, 4 OP Danida _ ilss f .JdW Mu- T .i t O t. V I *We welcomne iour commotents. thou ghts. aind suggestions oni The Urban Age. G- Fane enMae .-RE1 O lcp't Editor: Editor: Q N .. Huing -Reseerch Having just finished reading the Fall 1993 1 have read several issLues of The irban Age. lra Urhoai Age, I felt compelled to write and tell What 1 like most about it is the thematic cover- L1 I MDDMagement v1 YOLn how fascinated I was with the article "The age ofissues relating to urbanization. _ Programme Bus-Driver's Syndromc in Buenos Aires." I I am currently workinig on a book on urban look around my own cnvironment and see that environment: Fr o7n Beijing to Delhi-A Reviev, it is exactly right. In gcneral. The Urban Age oJ'the Issues in South Asitin asdSoutheast.4sian This issue of I/le Urban Age is funded by helps nie uisderstanchow urbanizationii daily Ciiies. Cait your rcaders sctidmc their studics on the Danish Agency for International affects marly situati onIs in the world. thi s subject for use i ni my research? Development, the Federation of Canadiani I eagerly awvait the Spri rig 1994 i ssue MHuicipalities, the Pahetch Ma inistry of focusi ng on immigration, as many ofthe CI' .JI3cilaW/shmi Foreign Affairs, and the World Bank. youngpeople ofFthiopia think immigration is Pr 7ogran] Offticer Deveetpiriental fninding has been provided the key to wealth. In fact, there are tvwo basic Luregr EtnviiouifentGtrrtip by the UNDP-UNCHStI labitat)-World wishes for many young Africans: "I wsant to go P. O. Bag lt4 Bank Urban ManiagemesitProgramineaiid to heaven. orto America." NewvDelhi 1(10)24 thc World Bank. _111111I I I I I Isr-ael Getachevc IUVesthiarargh JebBrugmain Ethio77ia (onrinuedon paeve24 l 1CLEI, Toronto, Canada Janies H. Carr Office of Housing Research Fannie Aoae, Wtashingtong. .C., US t G. Shabbir Cheema UANBP, Arew Y/crk USA Charles CorTea Bombay. India ZsuizsaDaniel Research Institute olthe Huingarrian Nfinistrivoffinance Editor Hate Budape t, Ilungar *1IJnUls Mamadou Diop Ba/kar Comntunin Count ii Ja/car, Senegal This issue of The Urban Age explores linkages aiid associatioiis of international niigrants who Nigel Harris between the global trends of international have senled in cities. Some of these networks DevelopmentPlanning Unit migration and urbanization. International aim to channel remittances-the money sent London, E7ighnd migration is a topic that generates eiiergetic home by labor mnigrants-into development Tb. H. Kolstee discussions and polarizing debates in nearly all projects and improvements, and to strengthen uicrhtMinisltrotfForeignAlhuirs cities ofthe world. This polarization often cultural ties of migrants between the cities wherc The Hciguie. .Netherlands revolves around issues related to race and they now live and the countries where they were AprodicioLaquian ethnicity, perceptions of differences, and fears born. UBC Centlre/lrf Hnran Settlements of the unfamiliar. Globally, remittances amount to USS 71 l'ailcouver, Cnada Cities worldwide are becoming more billion-second in value only to trade in cnrde Jaime Lemer Curitiba, Brazil eclectic and cultirally diverse -horne to oil. The overall impact of remittances continues Akin Mabogurije increasing numbers of both mLral-to-urban and to be controversial. I'heir positive and negative Ibadan, .igeria international migrants. Many cities strive for effects on individual cities are discussed in PabloTivelh cultural integration and acceptance of migrants, articles from El Salvador, Vietnam, Kuwait, the UrbanlmanagesientPrograsmme and some have achieved tiese goals. But Philippiiies, and Belgium. Quito. Ecuador intolerance of immigrants can dissolve into We hope this issue of The Ur ban Age wvill Jairne Valerizuela conflict and inter-ethnic violence played out on help create a better understanding of the linkages IULA/CELCADEL, Quiito, Ecuiidoc city streets. I'he natuec of the "melting pot," as between intemational imiigration and urbanization. it relates to cities, is a major theme in the lead We have highlighted several of the most _______T____________.______.____________7____ article, the guest editorial, and articles from outstanding resources available, each of which France and Germany. provides usefui insights into thcse linkages as Mass movement of people across interna- well as other topics related to international ArifHasan tional borders is not a new phenomenon- migration. Karachi, Pakistani major migrations have occurred sitice the In addition to the editofial board, maiiy people llildallerzer beginning ofhuman existence. While most helped shape this issue, and we thank them for Centro Esudios Sociil/es.u people do not relocate from the country of their their assistance and advice. We would especially At bier alesBunosAire.s.Argeiitina birth, the niumbers in our modem age are like to express osrr gratitude to World Bank (PeerCHSw Aairobin en extraordinary there are at least 100 million Visiting Scholar Sharon Stanton Russell for international migrants in the world today. helping us conceptualize and develop this issue I I I ~~~~~~~~~~~Many international migrants make their way to of The Urban Age. I I er~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~cties, a central theme in most articles in this As always, we encourage you to tend us your issue. Rural-to-urban (interiial) migration is coinmcnts, suggestions, and feedback on The ActingEditor BorinieBradford often a springboard for international migration. Urban .4ge. We look forward to hearing from Editor (on lteave Mary McNeil Articles from El Salvador. South Africa, the you. Production Michelle Lynch LZook United States, and Belgium describe networks -Bonnie Brad/ord Distribution ConsueloPowell NLI 1- W1 0 UR~ ------------------------------ International Migration and the Post-Industrial City by Saskia Sassen Saskia Sasseni is Professor of Urban Planning at Colotmbia University in New Yo 4- City. She has written widely on the mobilitv of labor and capital, cities in a world economv, and global cities. I mmigration has become part of sustained changes according to this over-arching tendency foreign migrants. One reason life in all highly developed time and place. Today the growth materializes in the fonn of a the pattems seen in advanced countries in the world. Even of low-wage jobs and o fcasual differentiation in urban space, post-industrial cities are also Japan, a country with strict labor markets facilitates the with the expansion of both operating in these cities is due to laws against the cntry of manual incorporation of immigrant gentrified areas and decaying the globalization of economic workers, is now re cei ving a workers into the post-industrial neighborhoods. Immigration has activity. The demographic growing number c f undocu- city. We see a labor market actually slowed the deterioration explosion in the developing world mented immigrants from several dynamic that thrives on the of many areas by transforming makes these cities profoundly countries, including the Philip- incorporation of newcomers, them into bustling commercial different from maj or cities in the pines, Thailand. M/[alaysia, 'outsiders," temporary and part- and residential areas. highly developed world where Pakistan, and Bangladesh. In most time workers-unlike. for Immigrants are often held population has either declined or developed countrics, immigrants examnple, the large unionized responsible for the increase in stabilized in the last ten years. are disproportionately concen- "Ford" factories of the 1950s. low-wage j obs and the growing Yet beneath the overwhelming trated in large cities. We are witnessing a period of unemployment and impoverish- demographic fact of the megacity At a time when cities in sharp transition in the economic ment of native workers. Actually, we see elements of post-industrial developed countries are facing organization of advanced econo- through their entrepreneurship, growth, with its associated growing unemployment and mies. Immigrants, far from being immigrants help lowver the cost of inequalities. In this context, social costs along with shrinking a burden, have played a strategic living for many low-income and immigrants and migrants contrib- resources, immigration has role in this transition. Immigration middle class people. ute to economic flexibility and become a convenient scapegoat. has contributed flexibility to a low-cost, low-profit entrepreneur- There is a growing conviction that situation where the norms of Economic Solutions ship. The failure to harness this immigrants do nolt play a produc- established labor markets are energy for wider urban economic tive role in thcsc cities. Critics often no longer viable due to The focus of policy efforts and development and upgrading claim that immigrants, with their extreme pri ce competition, hoth political action should not be on processes is a failure to maximize often low level of education, are a national and international. immigrants but rather on the the economic benefits of such drag on a city's well being and broader economic dynamic at flexibility andentrepreneurship. growth. and there is no place for Counting their Contributions work in large cities of advanced In post-industrial and develop- them in thc so-called "post- economies. Even without immi- ing country cities. the urban industrial" city, which needs only Immigrants have contributed grants, these inequalities would be productivity of the city as a whole highly educated personnel. an enormous amount of energy to evident and many in the middle must be maximized. The multiple small scale, low-profit entrepre- class would find their cost of articulations between the city of Devaluing Immigrants neurship, which is necessary to living even higher. The root the poor and the city of the rich meet the demand for goods and causes of the new inequalities are must be recognized. Immigrants But such views are distorted. services that larger standardized embedded in the new dynamics of make these articulations evident: The post-industrial city requires firms can no longer handle given growthl. Grow th itself is produc- they clean offices; they are vast numbers of low-wage low profit levels and increased ing inequalities. nannies in upper-middle-class workers whose educational levels costs of operation. In this context, Though not as clear and households: they are the mainte- arc irrelevant for theirjobs. This immigrants are almost akin to a evident as in the cities of highly nance staff in luxury buildings; is true even for the leading rapid deployment force, developed countries, many of and they run the restaurants where complex of industries, finance, But immigrants have also these patterns are also at work in workers with modest salaries eat. and corporate services. The notion absorbed the costs of being such a major cities of developing This labor force is an essential that only high level personnel are flexible labor supply low-wages countries such as Sao Paulo, part of the urban economy. even needed contributes to the dcvalu- and self-sacrifice. Their flexibility Buenos Aires, and Bangkok. Here in the most advanced post- ing of jobs and labor markets that and talent will not be maximized the equivalent of foreign imnmi- industrial cities. do not fit this image. Taken to an mnder these conditions. grants are often rural-to-urban El extreme, this devaluing begins to Paris, Tokyo, New York, migrants, though there are also justify low-wages and lack of Frankfurt, and Toronto are very employment security for a]l those different cities, but the overall The Urban Age aims to stimulate lively debate and interaction on who are not high l y edu cated. outcome of this economic var ious topics in developed and developinjg co0ntries. The ideas Since their origins, large cities dynamic is similar in these and expressed in articles appearing in The Urban Age reflect the personal commnents of each author, and are not representative of any one agenicy have received and incorporated other cities. There is a tendency or organization. migrants. But the specific towards inequality in earnings, Individutal articles appearing in The tJrban Age may he r-eproduced or conditions under which such and in the profit levels of different r eprinted provided the authorl(s) and The Urban Age are cited, and a incorporation occurs and is types of firms. To some extent THE URRRN ACE Spring 1994 INTERNATIONALMIGRATION continuedfrom page 1 The departure of migrants has major consequences for social and inner cities; between citizens of democratic states and illegal non- economic relationships in the country of origin- In the receiving citizens; and between dominant cultures and minority cultures. country, settlement is closely linked to employment opportunities, The gulf can be summed up as the difference between inclusion and which are often concentrated in industrial and urban areas, where exclusion. The "included" are those who fit into the self-image of a i the impact on receiving communities is immense. In New York prosperous, technologically innovative, and democratic society. The * City and Toronto, for example, the foreign-born make up one- excluded are the "shadow side": those who are necessary for the fourth of the population. reproduction of society, but who do not fit into the ideology of the The upsurge in migration is due to rapid international economic, model. Immig,rants are more likely to belong to the excluded. But the demographic, social, political, cultural, and environmental changes. groups are more closely bound together than they might like to think: Mass population movements are linked to large-scale, worldwide trends the corporate elite need the illegal immigrants, and the prosperous of rural-to-urban migration (internal migration) and to the growth of suburbanites need the slum-dwellers they find so threatening. Global Migratorq Movements ARcnc Frorr- -NCANADA P EE CHINU RONt America Frorn ASIC .b SU \ C r J A,a XAMEICA / \ ~ ,*tggj:7\ INONESACA 2 > \ - C \x 2; S UUSA LIA: !PACIFIC OC'EAN SOUT ai To AuStratia NEW ZEALAND NOTE: Arrow dimensions do not indicate the size of movements A-NITA1RC'TC cities. Some rural-to-urban migrants in underdeveloped countries will It is out of this contradictory and multi-layered character of the post- embark on a second migration, seeking to improve their lives by modem city that its enormous energy, its cultural dynamnism, and its moving to highly-developed countries. innovative capability emerge. But these co-exist with the potential for social breakdown, conflict, repression, and violence. It is also here that Focus on Cities the complex social and cultural interaction between different ethnic groups may in the future give birth to new peoples and provide the People who migrate from rural areas leave behind traditional forms basis for new forms of society. of production and social relationships to move into burgeoning cities. This is often the first stage of fundamental social, psychological and A Global Cullture cultural changes, which creates the predisposition for further migra- tions. To move from rural agriculture into a city like Manila, Sao Paulo The new ethnic diversity affects societies, and especially cities, in or Lagos, may be a bigger step for many migrants than subsequent many ways. Among the most important are issues of political partici- moves to "global cities" like Tokyo, Los Angeles, or Sydney. pation, cultural pluralism, and national identity. Immigration has Immigration has coincided with the crisis of modernity and the already had major, potentially destabilizing effects on politics in most transition to post-industrial societies. The erosion of the old "blue- countries. The only resolution appears to be in broadening political collar working class" and the increased polarization of the labor force, participation t oembrace immigrant groups. This may mean rethinking have led to a social crisis. Immigrants find themselves doubly at risk: the form and content of citizenship, and decoupling it from ideas of many of them suffer unemployment and social marginalization, yet at ethnic homogeneity and cultural assimilation. the same time, they are often portrayed as the cause of the problems. Neither restrictive measures nor development strategies can totally Nowhere is this more evident than in the global cities of the late curb international migration, at least in the sholt term, because there are twentieth century. Los Angeles, Toronto, London, and Sydney-to such powerful forces stimulating population movement. These include name just a few-are crucibles of social change, political conflict, and the increasing pervasiveness of a global culture and the growth of cultural innovation. They are marked by enormous gulfs between the cross-border rnovements of ideas, capital, commodities, and people. corporate elite and the informal sector workers who service them; between rich, well-guarded suburbs and decaying and crime-ridden continued on page5 P1 THE URRHI R6f Spring 1994 INTERNATIONALMIGRATION continuedfrom pagc 4 International mri gration is a major consequence of the North-South shape the future of their societics, as well as their relations with the gap. The North-South gap-the differentials in life expectancy, poorer countries of the South. Central issues include: demography, economic structure, social conditions and political * regulating legal immigration and integrating settlers; stability between industrial democracies and most ofthe rest of the * developing policies to cope with illegal migration; world looms as a major barrier to the creation of a peaceful and * finding long-term solutions to emigration pressure through prosperous global society. improved international relations; and I Clearly, intetnational migration is not the solution to the North- * exploring the role of ethnic diversity in social and cultural South gap. Migration will not resolve North Africa's unemployment change, and consequences for the nation-state and cities. problem, or appreciably reduce the income and wage gap between the USA and Mexico. The only realistic long-term hope for reduction of The major obstacle to the spread of a global culture is that it international migration is broad-based, sustainable development in the coincides with a political. economic and social crisis in many regions. less-developed countrics, enabling economic growth to keep pace with Where change is fast and threatening, narrow traditional cultures seem growth in the population and labor force. to offer a measure of defense. Immigration has often taken place at the Migrations arise from complex links between different societies, and same time as economic restructuring and major changes in political and lead to the formation of new links. Movements of professionals and social structures. People whose conditions of life are already changing students from developing countries to Western industrialized nations in an unpredictablc way often see newcomers as the cause of insecurity. are sometimes part o lthe "brain drain," but they also help create One of the dominant images in highly-developed countries is that of cultural links, and may encourage technology transfer. The growing masses of people flowing in from the "poor South" and the "turbulent mobility of professionals is a development of great significance, which East," taking awayjobs, pushing up housing prices, and overloading may in the future help to weaken national boundaries. social services. Today the governments and people of immigration countries have to face up to some serious dilemnmas. The answers they choose will help continued on page 24 F The Latest International Migrfation Trends At least 100 million migrants live outside Lanka. Remittances often translate into more money number of migrants. Italy, Spain, and Greece their countries of birth or citizenship, according spent for education and health services. have become countries of net inutnigration. to United Nations data. This includes roughly 36 million in Asia, the Middle East. and North Regional flows: Dramatic political changes in the countries of Africa; 23 million in Eastern and Western Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union Europe; 20 million in the United States and Labor migration within East and Southeast Asia have caused concem about possible large-scale Canada; 10 million in Sub-Saharan Africa, 6 is rapidly increasing as these regions continue to migration to Western European countries. million in Latin America and the Caribbean; and experience dynamic economic growth. Since the While massive and disorderly flows have not 4 million in Oceania, including Australia and end of the 1991 Gulf War, Asian and Arab workers occurred, significant population movements are New Zealand. Refugees are included in this 100 (notably Egyptians), have started returning to the linked with these political changes. million figure, as well as temporary and Gulf states, where demand for foreign workers is permnanent migrants. high. Precipitating Factors Major Patterns * In Sub-Saharan Africa, most voluntary migra- Dcmographic and economic forces create the tion is to other countries within Sub-Saharan Africa, potential for international migration. Whether or *While the absolute nunibers are large, most of despite increasing flows to Europe .African not migration actually takes place depends on the world's population never moves across migration flows tend to be highly volatile, changing "precipitating factors." These include: international borders. In only a few countries suddenly in response to conflicts and natural * technological advances, especially in such as Cuba, Afghanistan, Haiti, and El disasters. transportation and communication Salvador-have even as much as 10 percent of * recruitment of migrants by employers in the population emigrated in recent decades. * In Latin America and the Caribbean, flows are receiving countries; dominated by those to the United States, Argentina. * the development of social networks across While international migration flows have and Venezuela. Mexico has the largest number of borders, creating a social infrastructure of caused concern in Western industrialized emigrants, most of whom are in the United States. international migration; countries, more lhan half of international Colomnbia and Cuba are also major source countries, - increasing trade competition between high- migration is actually betwveen developing each with about 750,000 emigrants. wage economies of the industrialized countries countries, in other words, from south to south. and low-wage economies in much of the * The United States, Canada. and Australia are developing world; Remittances--the hard currency earnings that traditional receiving countries for immigration. The * governmental decisions (whether explicit or mnigrants send back to their home countries-are United States is expected to admit 800,000 to I implicit) to promote labor export or import as a immense; in 1989, net transfers were US$ 31 million immigrants annually in the 1990s. In matter of public policy; and, billion to developing countries alone. The official addition, as of 1993, there were approximately 3.5 * increases in violence, repression, persecution, total in 1990 was US$ 71 billion. Glohally, million illegal residents in the United States, most human rights violations, and ethnic tensions. remittances are second in value only to trade in from Latin America. Canada expects annual levels crude oil. The real figures are probably even of irmmigration to rise to 250,000 in 1993-95. This information was adaptedfrom: "Interna- higher, since many remittances flow through Australia's immigration was about 102,000 in 1992. tional2l'figratio., Fertilit', and Development 'by informal channels. Michael S Teitelbaum and Sharon Stanton Migration to Western Europe is predominantly Russelt, in Population and Development: Old * The poorest people in a society seldom have from outside the region, notably fromn the Maghreb, Debates, New Conclusions, Robert Cassen the means to migrate across intemational Turkey, and forner Yugoslavia. There are also (editor). U.S. -Third World Policy Perspectives borders. But rernittances have been credited growing numbers from Eastern Europe, Sub- No. 19 (New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction with reducing absolute poverty in a number of Saharan Africa, and Asia. Germany and, to a lesser Publishers in cooperation with ihe Overseas countries, inclucding Pakistan, Egypt, and Sri extent, France and Switzerland, receive the largest Development Council). Forthcoming.July 1994. THE URBHN GE Spring 1994 ~~------------------------------------- Exiting Hong Kong: Social Class ancl Adjusting to 1997 by Janet Salaff and Wong Siu-lun Janet Salaff is a visiting scholar at the University of Hong Kong and teaches in the Asia Studies Department at the University of Toronto. a Wong Siu-lun teaches in the Department of Sociology at the Universit) of Hong Kong. HONG KONG. On July 1, A realistic assessment of their academic or professional creden- abroad. They worry about ethnic 1997, the red flag of the People's ability to emigrate and to prosper tials recognized abroad, and they prejudices in the West. Republic of China will be hoisted abroad is what shapes the attitude anticipate a sharp decline in The lower middle-class lack' over Hong Kong as the British of Hong Kong people to 1997. earnings if they leave. the higher education, specialized colony reverts to China. This The decision to emigrate is rarely Their prop-rty and prosperity training, and funds to qualify as looming event has generated motivated just by politics. in Hong Kong are becoming independent emigrants to Canada considerable anxiety in Hong increasingly tied to China. China and Australia, the countries to Kong for more than a decade. The Affluent Middle Class has opened up further to the world which most Hong Kong people It is widely believed in the economy and experienced strong emigrate. Few apply for visas. West that most Hong Kong The concerns of Hong Kong's growth in the last several years. Few in this group identify families are fleeing for political affluent middle class about 1997 As long as this economic boom in strongly with Hong Kong politics, reasons, and that only lack of center on potential harm to family China continues, they maintain in which they generally play little funds keeps people in Hong livelihood and their economic confidence, and hope for further role. Most have consistent Kong. But, if people uniformly status. They are concerned about political reform and stability. economic and political expecta- disliked the prospect of Hong the sanctity of property after the They apply for visas as a form of tion about post-1997 life in Hong Kong's reversion to China, colony's reversion to China. They insurance. Kong, and have decided to emigration numbers would be have also come to expect predict- remain. shaped mainly by Western able careers as an outcome of The Lower IV[iddle-Class immigration policies. Instead, their lengthy education. They note The Working Class both economic and political that China lacks a secure legal The lower mniddle-class owns factors are reflected in the framework, and worry about little productive property in Hong Hong Kong's working class changing numbers of emigrants. rampant corruption. Kong, and they worry less about generally accept the prospect of For many in the affluent changes after 1997 harming their Chinese rule after 1997. Many of Social Class and Emigration middle class, salaries are high and economic base. They have Hong Kong's poor left China business opportunities are enjoyed a spurt of income more for economic than political Hong Kong emigration today expanding. Their future is cloudy improvement in recent years, reasons. consists largely of pcople from overseas. Only a few hold which they fear they cannot match Recent changes in China tend the business and professional to instill confidence in the classes. There are two basic views r i i working class. They see that of this phenomenon. Some see the YlCit 1111111 X O recent economic reforms have current wave of middle class raised living standards in China, emigrant families as largely The A t Mid C and think it unlikely that Chinese apolitical-people seeking an W i e don't t t rule would lower their living overseas haven mainly to protect C i w to suti ta and standards in Hong Kong. their family earnings. Others n od X i 1 a p t e nin H Kog. The Hong Kong working class characterize Hong Kong emigra- d gy and ptical will apply for visas if they think tion as a form of middle class ther wi a much f igKo.Iis afer to h they can do better in working political mobilization. This bs ess di wt C class jobs abroad. It is not so scenario stresses that the middle ;anage wh p t m to Singapore.) much fear of Chinese rule that classes are leaving to protect their propels them-instead, some see democratic, social, and economic better economic opportunities in rights after 1997. Visa applicants f o f Il reuniting with overseas relatives. quickly find that imnuigration Hnng bokeee , rouh up in C i pie But most do not expect to policy is class-based. Those who n C t isno t emigrate. They apply on a wager, are better-off are the most likely i d ifferent n Hon Kon1 and are not greatly disappointed if to apply to emigrate before 1997. whrynhv og ocutt epoe uly or but Sp, they do not succeed. Among Hong Kong emigrants not theyd nna t sueed.) a to Canada between 198 8and The i i 3 n Ca This article was adaptedfrom a 1990, more than half had higher W t aio Th e_bilin ]Eoand ty chapter by the authors in Social than a secondary level education, s icrad 91 t t' s Class in Chinese Society, Lau Siu and could speak English. There s (Retteijibordcolc K Kai and Wong Siu Lun (eds.), were over three times as many tn I t tt Hong Kong: Chinese University entrepreneurs and investors as e t Pres s Corthcoming). production workers. THE UN DONGE Spring 1994 fREI ----- -- --- ---- --- ----- ---- -- --- -- ---- - Canada's Golden Mountain: Closing the Gates? by Aprodicio A. Laquian Aprodicio Laqulian is a Canadian immigrantfronm the Philippines who now lives in Vancouver. He is cuarrentlv the Director of the Centrefor * Hiwnman Settlements a/the University ofBritish Coluimbia. VANCOUVER. In 1993, more Monster Homes, Mega-malls In Richmond, where a third of come as investors (bringing than 40,000 imunigrants flew inito and Casinos the population is Asian, the in $350,000 to reside in British Vancouver International Airport, construction of three inega-malls Columbia, or $250,000 to reside about two-thirds of them from The hottest political issues in catering to Asians have been in other parts of Canada), and feel Asia. Forty-one percent of these British Columbia at present are all criticized as "not being Cana- "they want our money but not immigrants had Cantonese or related to immigration. dian." Some Asian developers us." While community leaders Mandarin Chinese as their native Vancouver developers have have changed their designs to attempt to calm these fears. there tongue, 17 percent Punjabi or been building very large homes avoid antagonizing Canadians. are many indicators of racism. Hindi, 13 percent Tagalog, and 6 for Asian immigrants. These are A number of Asian shops that The recent political triumph of percent Vietnamese. referred to as "monster homes". advertised their goods only in the Reform Party in British Canada's westernmost Usually two-story buildings in Chinese characters have been Columbia is another sign of an province of British Columbia was excess of 5,000 square feet, pressured by the Richmond City anti-immigrant backlash. The originally settled by royalists monster homes occupy almost the Council to use English-only signs Reform Party, which has been from the British Isles. Chinese entire space in traditional house for their wares. critical of Canada's liberal and Japanese immigrants caine plots. Tree-loving Vancouverites In early 1994, a proposal to immigration and refugee policies, after the 1 850s, many as workers are particularly upset at the construct a Las Vegas style casino has become so strong that all but on the Canadian Placific railroad. tendency of Asian homeowners to on Vancouver's waterfront was one of the elected officials of the To the Chinese, British Columbia cut down trees that obstruct their met with angry protests that the former Social Credit Party have was the "Golden M4ountain" that views, a practice attributed tofeng casino would further erode the become Reform Party members. promised wealth and fortune. shui, said to determine whether a city's affordable housing stock, Metropolitan Vancouver's That image still rings true, house and its surroundings will and was catering to the gambling population is projected to reach especially for people from Hong bring good or bad luck. interests of affluent Asians. Fear more than 3 million residents by Kong concerned about the fate of In the suburb of Shaughnessy, was expressed that the casino the year 2021. This growth, based the British colony after it reverts people have appealed to the would encourage Chinese triads on 2.5 percent increases per year, to China in 1997. Vancouver City Council to and Asian youth gangs. will be due mainly to internal and Canada, along with the tJnited prevent construction of monster international migration. States, Australia, and New homes. In the nearby city of Are the Gates Closing? However, projections are not Zealand, continues to accept Richmond, newspapers have predictions. If tensions arising international migrants. According waged a campaign against the lThe controversy over rapid from continued immigration to the 1991 Census, 16 percent of building of more megahouses, immigration of Asians to worsen, Asian migrants might Canada's population, some 4.3 arguing that these structures are Vancouver is generating fear bypass the Golden Mountain for million people, are itmmigrants. changinig the character of the among the immigrants, especially other destinations. The immigrants congregate in city's neighborhoods. In their those from Hong Kong, that the H3 the largest cities. Vancouver, defense, homeowners and city's residents are about to shut Canada's third largest city, has developers have been crying the gates to the Golden Mountain. 476,530 immigrants, about a third racism. Most Hong Kong immigrants of its population. Recent statistics reveal that 27 percent of immi- ;i--u;ste i iiooies are chanlgi,ng [lie (luieirac ter grants entering through 'ur- .. o - - omer neighhcoilhoolcs. Vancouver each year are from Hong Kong. Immigration, combined with internal migration from eastern and central Canada, has contrib- uted to an econoinic boom in British Columbia. The provinc-ial population is growing at 2.5 percent per year, compared with 1. 5 percen-t for tlhe whole country. However, this rapDid growvth has also resuhted in severe social and environmental pr-oblems which are, in turn, creating a racist backlash that threatens to close the gates to this beautiful land. El Salvador: Impacts of International Migration on Cities by Mario Lungo lMario Lungo is a researcher at the National Foundation for Development (FUNDE), and a professor at the Central American University :I "Jose Simeon Cafias" in San Salvador. He specializes in development issues and urban planning. SAN SALVADOR. Migration socioeconomic effects of such exchange rate stability. poorer communities and, in from El Salvador has occurred movements. Migrant characteris- Data on th.e importance of particular, in marginal settle- throughout this century. Salvador- tics are known only post- 1979, remittances in the national ments. Consumption patterns of eans left home to build the and then only for those who economy are revealing: they families receiving remittances has Panama Canal at the beginning of migrated to the United States. accouinted for 1.4 percent of GDP changed, especially in smaller the 1 900s. Others went to work in Individual rather than family in 1979, and riose to 10.5 percent cities. the Honduran banana plantations migration has predominated-the of GDP by 1992. Remittances During the 1980s money in the 1930s and 1940s. Since the majority of those on the move were 4.4 percent of exports in received was used primarily to 1970s, Salvadorean migration has have been male (59 percent), 1979, and accounted for 114 purchase food, clothing, electrical essentially been to the United originating from urban areas (63 percent by 1992. household appliances, and States, with 65 percent to Califor- percent), with relatively high What has the impact been on vehicles. The small towns nia alone. It is estimated that, by education levels compared to the El Salvador's urban system and gradually acquired a new image, the 1990s, almost 1 million national average (8.7 years of on the internal structure of its in wvhich U.S. fashion and Salvadoreans were living abroad, schooling completed), and an cities? Two m igration-related consumption patterns predomi- mostly in the United States. average age of 25. Members of phenomena can be identified in nated. Remittances were used to a this population are at a productive the country's urban system. On lesser extent for farming and to Migration and the Years of point in their lives and have a the one hand, the metropolitan purchase real estate. Conflict respectable level of education. area of San Salvador and the During the 1980s an estimated eastern cities continue to grow. 77 percent of the remittances Before 1980, these waves of Effects on El Salvador's Cities Indeed, the population of were used for consumption, 20 migration were essentially for Usulutan tripled its population percent for savings, and only the economic reasons. Later, politics Some assert that this out- between 1971 and 1992. remaining 3 percent was invested predominated as a major force migration has been an economic On the other hand, there has in productive activities. The low because of the civil war, which drain on El Salvador, in terms of been a drop ir the population of percentage invested in productive lasted throughout the 1 980s. It is human resources, and has several cities with fewer than activities has had a negative estimated that economic motiva- transferred capital to the eco- 20,000 inhabitants in various social effect, particularly in the tions accounted for 58 percent of nomic benefit of the recipient regions where the conflict small towns, where it served as a migrations prior to 1979, drop- countries, particularly the United occurred. Research efforts disincentive for the recipient ping to 36 percent after 1979. States. Yet this migratory flow currently underway suggest that a family members to engage in Political factors are thought to has kept the unemployment rate at large share of the population that productive employmenit. In 1992 account for 8 percent and 29 socially tolerable levels. Remit- abandoned these smaller cities has only 37 percent of these people percent of migration during these tances from migrants have helped emigrated. International migration were economically active, same two periods. to offset the trade deficit, supple- seems to have had the greatest whether employed or unemployed. Knowing who these migrants ment decreasing income levels of impact on the internal structure of The emergence of new are can reveal a lot about the recipient families, and maintain cities that are smaller in size. expressions of urban culture induced by these consumption Use of patterns can be found in all cities R1emittances throughout the country. Automo- bile use plays a key role in the ____________ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~The growing structure of these patterns, and is reliance on remit- a clear identification of someone tlances has changed receiving remittances or having the way Salvador- returned from abroad. The entry cans live. The of used cars from the United recipients benefit States, which have been flooding not only financially, into the country in recent years, is but also in terms of a mark of social distinction in social mobility. An small towns and the low-income estimated 75 percent districts of the larger cities. It is opf those who also one of the main reasons why changed their place the major roads are becoming so 4 ~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~~~~of residence clogged. pireviously lived in continuedonpage9 00 EL SALVADCOR continledfrom page ', But in the smaller cities the various Salvadorean cities another effect ofinternational involved in this effort. Women: The "Invisible" Migrants migration over the past 20 years has been the initiation of infra- The Role of International structure and other projects. Many Cooperation Women make up nearly half the international migrant population. of these cities have undertaken In the European OECD countries, women constitute the largest part upgrading projects, receiving In addition to Salvadoreans. of the foreign-bon populationr Io unties including urkina Faso and their inspiration from the creation the involvement of a diverse Togo, female foreign-born populations were as large as male ones. Over of associations of former residents group of donors can be decisive half the current global refugee population is female, and 60-80 percent in the various urban centers of the in steering international migration of refugee households are headed by women. United States. In El Salvador, toward helping to create an urban Although women are often thought of as "passive movers," migrating only to join or follow family members, research has found that eco- these efforts have included the order that is more just and nomic rather than personal or social considerations predominate. construction of roads, bridges, equitable, more democratic. and Surveys of female migrants in Southeast Asia, Latin America and the and sports fields, and the provi- socially sustainable. Caribbean indicate that 50-70 percent moved in search of employment. sion of equipment For schools and The various development Even in South Asia and Africa, with the highest proportion of women sion of equipment for schools and The various development ~who reported moving health centers. This is perhaps one cooperation bodies active in El ', _ primarily for famnily of the positive consequences of Salvador, whether Government reasons, the percentage the migratory process, but one agencies, multilateral organiza- of those with economic motivations often whose impact on development tions, foundations or international eded 50oprent processes has serious limitations, NGOs, can, in fact, play an Female migrants are given the absence of support important role in encouraging the concentrated particu- mechanisms to promote the use of channeling of the remittances larly in the 16-24 year the remittances for productive from Salvadorean migrants. The - a gropbfe first mnarriage. Migration urban activities. aim should be to ensure that they peaks again among are essentially used to promote women in their late The Peace Divideirid productive activities not limited to fifties and sixties, isolated microenterprises or those _3 " - - primarily separated, isltdmicroenterprises ortoedivorced or widowed The signing of the Peace that provide services to consum- women. Across all Agreements between the Govern- ers, but also larger production regions, migration of ment and the Frente Farabundo units, providing goods and elderly women iS far more common than in Marti para la Liber aci6n Nacional services to enterprises. I , men of a similar age. (FMLN) in January 1992 While some of the funds sent Despite strong prompted a substantial break- home by migrants should con- evidence of labor force through in dealing with issues of tinue to be used for the construc- participation, immngra- tion policies still tend migration and domestic produc- tion of economic and social to assume that all migrants are men, and that women are "dependents." tivity. Now remittances are infrastructure, they should not be Womcn's right to work may be sevcrely restricted; access to support increasingly being used to invest limited to these uses. Priority systems and social services may be limited; and rights to naturalization in real estate, which is stimulating needs to be given to infrastructure may be indirect and dependent on the status of the spouse. Single the construction se.tor while that is more comprehensive in women have great difficulty in securing legal admission as immigrants the construction sector while that IS more comprehensive in in industrialized countries. causing the price of urban land to terms of social benefits and social Some believe that women's migration contributes to the emancipation skyrocket. Both the government and environmental sustainability. of women because they gain greater independence through wage and the NGOs assisting with the As part of this general strategy, earnings, which enhances their decision-making power within the family. However, social networks, strong kinship linkages, the extension development of lower-income it is both possible and advisable to of traditional social structures to new settings, their position in the ethnic sectors are beginning to vigor- think of investing this significant enclave, and limitedjob opportunities combine to expand the opportuni- ously encourage the use of the flow of funds with a view to ties of migrant woman only slightly- if at all. remittances from the migrant developing an urban system that From The State of World Population 1993: The Individual and the population for productive has fewer regional disparities and World: Population, Migration, and Development in the 1990s, UNFPA, activities; particularly for urban is geared to sustainability-in 220 East 42nd Street, New York, NY 10017, U.S.A. microenterprises of various kinds. other words, cities with urban There is even talk of establish- structures that are more fair and ing a grassroots fi nancial system, more equitable, and that lend issue of paramount importance. In areas-the cities in particular- which would serve as one of the themselves to the building of a this harsh and difficult process of where migrants originated. This key instruments for bringing true community. uprooting and becoming assimi- could have enormous impacts on about a shift in how money sent But all this calls not only for lated into foreign societies, far- the entire country. from abroad is used. It would certain material conditions but reaching and novel relationships f3 operate both in El Salvador and also (and more importantly) for have been forged that constitute a those U.S. cities where the largest the developmcntofthe human real fund of social capital forthe concentrations of migrants are condition. The extensive migra- migrants. This social capital can, located. The aim would be to get tion in the 1 980s of Salvadoreans in turn, provide the launching pad the associations of migrants from to countries in the North raises an for the development of the THF URRRN RCE Spring 1994 - ------ Overseas Emigration Helps Reform Hanoi by Robert L. Bach and Duong Bach Le Both authors are from the Institute for Research on Multicuituralism and International Labor, Binghamton University, New York. Robert L. Bach is also a Senior Associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, D.C. Duong Bach Le is a member of the Institute of Sociology in Hfanoi. HANOI. Even before the Visitors can still walk through old migration, and the concentration United States lifted its embargo sections of the city to find of people and capital is new. Impact on Housing and Labor against Vietnam, few cities in the artisans, barbers, and bookshops. world were changing as quickly But increasingly, the traveler now Remittances and Reform Market refornms in the early and dramatically as Hanoi. For also passes shops selling Western 1 990s changed the significance o decades, Hanoi served as the consumer goods. While not yet at International migration is also remittances. This money soon urban center of Vietnam's the pace of Hong Kong, Beijing, a powerful, yet little understood, became a primary source of agricultural North. Its socialist or even Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi contributor to Hanoi's reforms. foreign exchange for investment leadership stressed social disci- is rapidly racing forward. Lenin's For years, migration was a in the housing boom that contin- pline and production, and monument has already become a sensitive political issue in Hanoi. ues to be an economic driving Population ontflows from force in Hanoi. Housing "fever" Vietnam created stark images of has inflated land prices, reshaped refugees afloat on the South the physical landscape, and China Sea or trapped in Hong sparked the emergence of an Kong detention camps. urban labor market. In recent For Hanoi, the refurgee exodus years, entire new neighborhoods was like many other national have sprung up, and the architec- policy. problprs. It was critical to ture of these new houses pro- the national leadership, but unlike claims the value of recent its effects on ao Chei Minh City, remittances. Local practice the refugee problem did not imprints the date of construction penetrate or pervade the social in the plaster on the front wall. atmosphere of the city. It was a Most have been built since 1991. political, not a personal problem. The housing boom has The northern flow to Hong Kong accelerated the formiation of an originated primarily in the coastal expanding regional labor market. areas in Quar g Nine, Haiphong Since 1991, opportunities to work and DaNang. Now, Vietnamese in construction have drawn returning fromn Hong Kong pass contract labor crews from areas side. m hthrough a staging area outside outside Hanoi. Team foremen Hanoi. recruit workers from their For Hanoi, intermational hometown and bring them to migration means money. Hanoi's Hanoi, where they live tempo- connection tc intemrational rarily on the building site until the ___________________________ a c .olmigration began with labor house is complete. A compte- frowned upon consumerism and cultural oddity amid the rewards Soviet Union in the 1970s. emerged involving spontaneous commerce. Compared to the and punishments of overheated Vietnam's workers helped pay the rural-to-urban migrants. Their West, it was a city frozen in time, market life, national debt to fraternal socialist temporary, sporadic employment French colonial architecture Vietnam's open embrace of a states by working in factories in forms the lowest rung of an dominated. Political billboards market economy brings to Hanoi Czechoslovakcia, East Germany, increasingly stratified labor atop one-story buildings defined a the successes and problems of Poland, and Rlussia. Exported market. Day laborers earnjust skyline without hotel signs, or the cities throughout Southeast Asia. workers also went to the Middle enough for immediate consump- steel arms of construction cranes. The urban challenge is hardly East, includinkg Iraq, Libya, and tion, leaving little or nothing to Only four or five years ago, new to Vietnam. Most observers Egypt. remit to their families in neigh- Hanoi's subdued street life believe Ho Chi Minh City, Before Vietn am's market boringvillages. reflected apolitical and economic Hanoi's urban partner in the reforms, remittances fromn International migration system centcred on the country- South, never lost its U.S.-indued overseas workecrs translated back contributes to this emerging labor side. market character and is well on its home into i sol ated, speci al market and its increasing income Market reforms are now way to becoming another privileges for particular families, inequalities both directly, through altering the physical design of the Bangkok. In Hanoi, open street Remittances became a symbol of remittances, and indirectly, city and transforming its eco- markets, hawkers, day labor social status fobr the lucky few through fueling construction. nomic and social character. pools, spontaneous internal whose relatives worked abroad. continued on page]]l THE URONE AGE Spring 1994 HANOI continuedf iomn page 6 Although living standards are face difficulties re-entering the The increasing labor mobility elite audiences also dominate improving throughout Vietnam, local labor market. Hanoi police that accompanies market celebrations of new Western average per capita income records show that contract laborcrs development has also expanded commercial ventures. For remains among the world's who returned from abroad corn- the illegal trafficking of goods example, less than three lowest. Day laborers hauling prised 16 percent ofjobless adults across the Vietnam-China weeks after the United crushed stone to a housing site between 16 and 45 years of age in border. Rapid economic growth States lifted its embargo in receive roughly US$1 a day. 1992. Growing dependence on in the Chinese border towns has March 1994, young people Over the course of a year, a day overseas job markets also subjects attracted thousands of Vietnam- flocked to the opening celebration laborer can earn irore than the local economies to the vagaries of ese workers. Transborder. of a Coca-Cola venture at the US$200 earnedby an average internationalpolitics.Forexample. circularmigration only 00 Opera House, a 1911 French Vietnamese worker. Yet their the Pcrsian Gulf War dislocated miles north of Hanoi is now a colonial landmark. They danced earnings cannot compare with an thouLsands of Vietnamese workers way of life for the region. Yet, in front of the balcony from overseas worker, who may remit from Iraq. Ironically, the U.S. Vietnamese officials have which Ho Chi Minh announced several times that average in a government assisted financially complained that the border the takeover in the 1945. On that single payment. with the return home of these exchange undermines opportu- evcning, two 30-foot high Remittances from overseas workers. nities for local Hanoi industries. inflatable Coca-Cola bottles hung family members generate much The most important structural Higher quality goods from from the same balcony. more income than required for change in Vietnam's labor export China flood the local market and local consumption, even in the program has been the collapse of preempt growth possibilities. Courting the Overseas Migrant larger cities. They provide the the Soviet Union and the Eastern resources for a rapidly rising but European economies. Sharp Emigration versus Socialism Former refugees may also small elite. This segment of the declines in both regions caused adopt a new role in their home- Hanoi population combines significant return flows to Hanoi The most profound impact of land. T'he government is moving remittance income with several and a severe drop in opportunities international migration on tentatively towards some form of other sources of foreign currency. for future overseas employment. Hanoi, however, may be social, accommodation with overseas They also work multiple jobs and Many Vietnamese workers were cultural, and political. Unlike Vietnamese communities. Some own several houses. For ex- stranded abroad with no jobs, no other parts of Vietnam, I Tanoi officials hope overseas Vietnam- ample, the hcad of one nouvcau way to return home, and facing will be the site of a nlew era of ese will become a source of new riche family owns more than ten growing hostility from local struggle in its long-embattled investments. particularly sparking new houses in Hanoi. Yet he residents. In Moscow, for instance, history. In balancing market a revival of small businesses in continues to live in the crowded several Vietnamese laborers were forces and the ideals of a the major cities. Others worry family apartment in the ccnter of killed in alleged black market socialist political system, the that a few overseas Vietnamese the city's oldest and poorest activities. Many Muscovites feel Vietnamese government counts harbor expectations of regaining neighborhood. Already a foreign that Vietnamese and other foreign on increased labor mobility political influence in Vietnam. In currency millionaire, he continues workers are integral to the "mafia" internally and internationally, to the first few years of this accom- to save for his family and that now controls much of the local provide employment and foreign modation, most overseas Viet- children. kiosk economy. exchange. namese have not wanted to return These benefits clearly make Simultaneously, some permanently. Initial adventurers overseas work an attractive Trends in Export Labor officials believe they must have only sought to recover lost option. Desire to participate in an control the cultural and political property, reunite with family, or export labor program is wide- The Hanoi Govermnent fully impact of international infilu- scout for possible investmenit spread among Hanoi residents. recognizes and embraces the value ences. Senior Vietnamese opportunities. According to the authors' recent of labor exports. According to officials worn' about the Hanoi's decade of reform will survey, over 12 percent of scnior officials, Vietnam has growing commercialism that create, and must confront, the householders interviewed in stalted contract negotiations with results from marketization. familiar challenge of rising Hanoi said they woul d like to go several of its Southeast Asian Some Hanoi officials see expectations. Open markets, abroad temporarily for work. The neighbors. international cultural and social foreign investments, increasing willingness was even greater in Benefits from these labor export influences as western efforts to income inequality, and improved Haiphong, DaNang. and Ho Chi programs are not limited to foster "peaceful evolution" consumptionpromise expanded Minh City. Each has greater tics individual workers and families. beyond socialism and single social andpolitical participation. to overseas communities and, at Vietnamese workers abroad have party rule. Hanoi must come to terms with least in the latter case, has made blazed commercial trails in Signs of change are unmis- this challenge, in the way the greater progress in its reforms. overseas urban markets. A vibrant takable. Consumerism has government both manages the trade, for instance, now exists already gripped Hanoi's youth. economy and relates to its Problems with Export Labor between textile producers outside Brigades of young bikers citizens. The city must also adapt Hanoi and Vietnamese merchants nightly circle downtown Hanoi physically and socially to the Integration with the world in Moscow. Frequent, routine in the same way they have in Ho rapid changes. International labor market is bringing new Aeroflot flights carry bales of Chi Minh City for years. Most migration will be an inevitable problems to Hanoi. WAorkers Western-style, low-priced garments motorbikes are imports paid for source of these adaptations. returning from overseas already from Hanoi to Moscow. with remittances. Youthful, f3 THE URBAN 06E Spring 1994 Migration and Urbanization: A Glirmpse of the Gulf by Nasra M. Shah and Makhdoom A. Shah ^ Nasra M. Shah is a faculty member in the Department of Community Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, at Kuwait University. Makhdoom A. ri Shah is the Chairman of the Health Information Administration Department in the Faculty of'Allied Health Sciences and Nursing, at Kuwait University. KUWAIT. Migration to the increase the l ikelihood of settling Gulf Migration male, one-fifth of the expatriate Gulf has led to major changes in in urban areas. Also, a substantial labor force is female. Housemaid the growth of cities in both amount of remittance income is The large numbers of workers constitute about 71 percent of all sending and receiving countries. spent on improving the quality of in the Gulf result from several female foreign workers. During Research in Asia has shown that housing in South Asian countries. factors, including: the small and the past two decades, housemaids migrants do not necessarily Migrants helped build the young populations of the Gulf represent a growing segment of originate in the cities. In Pakistan cities of the Gulf countries and countries; the trend toward the labor force in other Gulf and Bangladesh, for example, are needed to maintain infrastruc- seeking high-r levels of education Cooperation Council (GCC) two-thirds of all migrants to the ture and services. The urbaniza- among nationals; the low cost of countries as well. Gulf came from rural areas in the tion rate has been higher in the importing workers; and the Housemaids in the GCC late 1970s and early 1980s. The Gulf countries than in other parts reluctance of nationals to partici- countries come mainly from Sri network of recruitment agents is of the world, due to high rates of pate in some activities. Lanka, the Philippines, and India. widespread, and recruitment is population growth and migration. The Gulf crisis of 1990-91 Each of these countries has tried sometimes made in the villages, It is estimated that 80 percent or resulted in the displacement of to regulate the export of domes- particularly for unskilled laborers. more of the total population in about two million workers, most tics in order to minimize their five of the six GCC countries will of whom returned to their country exploitation. This group of Migration and Urbanization reside in urban areas by the turn of origin. It also resulted in the workers has been most vulnerable of the century. movement of almost 400,000 to human rights abuses. After migration to the Gulf, a The nature of work for which Palestinians and Jordanians from The import of housemaids is majority of the migrants live in most migrants are imported Kuwait, and the exodus of about controversial since it is generally cities (see table). Residence in a generally requires urban resi- 800,000 Yemnenis from Saudi believed that they have a negative modem urban environment has dence, contributing to rapid Arabia because of the support of impact on the children in their far-reaching implications for the urbanization of Gulf cities. these countries for Iraq. The post- care, and on the culture in lives of these workers. Experi- In Kuwait, where migrant Gulf war period has witnessed the general. However, their presence encing the amenities they are able workers constitute 80 percent of rapid return of workers, and has is justified by the employers for to enjoy in the Gulf cities the labor force, 58 percent of the resulted in record high levels of reasons of social status, house provides a new framework for male expatriate workers in 1993 labor emigration from some South work, and child care. The labor their own future once they return were concentrated in production- Asian countries, such as Pakistan force participation rate of Kuwait to their home countries. Among related occupations located in the and Bangladesh. women has increased from only 2 return migrants there is a strong cities. Such work is considered percent in 1965 to 25 percent in preference to move out of earlier undesirable by nationals. Sub- Gender and Migration 1993. blue collarjobs into self employ- stantial numbers of foreign Despite the impressive positive ment-mainly retail trade and workers are also employed in While the mnajority of all changes in the roles of Kuwaiti transportation. Such preferences professional and technicaljobs. migrant workers to Kuwait are women, however, fertility levels remain high, with an average number of 6.5 children per Populatio. llrbaniation, an Migratin Tiends n Su!f Loperationwoman. This is consistent with Council (DCCI Countries the government'sgpopulation ___________________________________________________________________ policy which, since 1985, has Total Percentnon- Percent non' ~~~~aimed to achieve a balance GCC population nationalin national ~~~~~~~~ between Kuwaiti nationals and Country (OCOs) Percentutan population labor force ~~~expatriates. The ho-usehold size is one of the justifications used for importing a large number of 1975 2090 197% 2000 1988 [975 1990 ~~~maids. Bahramn22 62 7. 8. 948 5. Kuwait 1,007 2,782 83.8 97.2 57* 702 80.0* ~~Living Conditions in Kuwait Omnan 76 20761 1. 3037 7.0Residential pattemns in the Guob cities are closely associated with Saudi Arabia 7,251 20,686 58.7 1 80.2 40 32.0 59.8 ~migration. Nationals and expatr- UnitedArabEmirates 505 1,950 79.8 77.8 66 84.0 89.3 ~~ates are concentrated in different continued on page3 13 - IRE OBRAN A6E Spring 1994 KUWAIT coniinued from pege 12 parts of the cities, with notably Stirring the French M elting Pot different types of housing. In Kuwait, most expatriates live in by Remi Clignet high-rise apartment buildings, Renzi Clignet is Director of Research at ORSTOM, the Frenich Institute for Scientific Research. while most Kuwaitis live in villas. The government effectively I maintains this segregation of PARIS. French urban foreign residents is high; when between the rich and poor residential areas by providing policies, while increasingly foreigners reprcsent a significant grows largcr and larger. To be a housing to its nationals either free acknowledging the need to proportion of the overall local resident of a bad neighborhood of charge or at highly subsidized accelerate the socio-economic population; or when the numbers becomes a stigma that blocks prices, while many of the expatri- and cultural integration of increase so fast they put extreme employment and prevents moving ates are provided accommodation foreigners, are subject to a pressures on local services. to a more desirable part of town. by their employers, growing malaise which threatens Immigration and emnployment. Companies that import a to tear the political fabric of Social Problems Immigrants are concentrated in majority of blue collar workers French society. Policies govern- economic sectors with high rates (especially in the cleaning and ing immigzration, economic As the diversity of immigrants of unemployment. Their plight is manual services) usually provide development, and urban growth increases, their participation in often further aggravated by housing, transportation to and are in conflict. French social life changes what involvement in infonnal sector from work, and food. Whilc Immigrants hope the economy the hosts and guests expect from activities. The treatment immi- accommodations usually have air- of the host country will grow at one another. Immigrants tend to grants receive reflects the divorce conditioning, running water, and least as much as development complain that public authorities of many industrial or commercial indoor plumbingl, the living back home declines. Managers of do not do enough to help them; enterprises from municipal life. conditions are far from luxurious. large businesses act as if surviv- French taxpayers and the neediest The government is trying to In order to minimize costs, eight ing in a highly competitive segments of the French popula- reduce the unemployment of or more workers may share a environment requires either a tion complain that too much is young immigrants by hiring them room fined with bunk beds, and low-paid unskilled labor force or done for foreigners. These to restore and repair the housing up to 30 may share a bathroom. complex machinery and fewer conflicting stances aggravate projects in which they live. ASembyince Octob of2 aNationalbut more skilled workers. problems faced by both the local Similarly, some companies train Assembly in October 1992, n Defining urban policies involves and the central governments. young immigrants free of charge cemeuwaith sees imge abreoa. a constant redistribution of Ilvmmigration andformal before negotiating their hiring by cerned with its ismage abroad human and material resources schooling. Increases in the small local enterprises. Greater concern is being ex- between central and local numbers of immigrants ultimately pressed about protectig the rights govermments. Economic slumps mean an increase in the number Heightened Social Conflicts orign workters,eanda h uen tend to exacerbate the clashes of young dependents. The rstabights co ithin tee hastbena among immigration, economic concentration of young immi- Violence in French suburban established withi the Naional development, and urban policies. grants in disadvantaged urban ghettos was initially a strategy M hlssembly neighborhoods jeopardizes the used to force public authorities to Migrants have helped to shape Changes in Patterns egalitarian orientation of the negotiate new investments in the the size and structure of cities in national school system. In order local coimnunity. Its current the Gulf. Upon return to their In 1990 the French population to reduce both the academic frenzy symbolizes the demise of home countries, they are also included 51.3 million individuals handicaps of young immigrants any social order. Often triggered likely to contribute to the rate of by birth, 1.8 million who had and subsequent difficulties of by rumors concerming the police urbanization. Despite falling acquired French nationality, and finding employment, French or local authorities, this violence wagesand,theGuf rexporto mremat-s 3.6 million immigrants. The authorities have created educa- is not exclusively inspired by ment, thneGulf sxperience rmains national background of these tional priority zones. The creation counter-racism. Indeed, it a positive one for most migrants. immigrants is increasingly of these zones, however, does not involves the destruction of Sending-country governments as diverse. necessarily reduce the different amenities that exclusively serve well as individuoal households The concentration of foreign- educational opportunities of ghetto residents. view labor migr ation as a boon in ers in Paris keeps growing (a little French and foreign-bom students. The failure of current urban terms of remittance receipts and more than one-third in 1990 Nor does it reduce the frequency policies has enhanced the power welcome the opportunity to compared with less than one-fifth or intensity of cultural conflicts. of the French courts. They are maximize their chances of in 1946). Their nationality varies Immigration and housing. expected to redefine the rights across districts. In the Depart- Despite initiatives to provide and duties of all turban residents ment of Seine Saint Denis, the immigrants with decent housing, without the benefit of clear 13 City of Aubervilliers hosts 20,000 overcrowding is common and the guidelines. Certainly, the malaise foreigners, who represent 3 0 level of comfort lower than for makes the lives of immigrants percent of the population. French-born counterparts. more difficult. But it is also Suburbs of French metropoli- Immigrants are concentrated in tearing apart the political fabric of tan areas become ghettos when the worst parts of the least French society. the absolute number of their attractive suburbs. The gap 13 THE URRRN REE Spring 1994 EM ESU -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- - --- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- - Trans-urban Migration South Africa as a Test Bed by AbdouMaliq Simone I AbdouMaliq Simone is Director ofResearch for the Foundation for Contemporary Research, an urban developmentNGO working in E Cape Town and Johannesburg, South Africa. SOUTH AFRICA. At the identity. Maintaining the house- lived in fifteen African countries boon to these associations and recent presidential inauguration of hold and the community means as a "courier oi commodities" networks. Nelson Mandela, U.N. Secretary cutting across what were consid- says: "We are here to remind General Boutros Boutros-Ghali ered, at least in the colonial South Africans that they live in Understanding Trans-urban indicated that South Africa could period, distinct cultural, political, Africa, not America; although, if Linkages now take its rightful place in and ethnic lines. this place wasrn't a lot like Africa. Despite its long status as a Many kinship-based enter- America, I doubt many of us Economic considerations, coupled with political instability in many parts of the continent, have made South Africa a major destination for migrants from Angola, Cameroon, Congo, Cote d'Ivoire, Mali, Mozambique, Senegal, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zaire as well as the traditional "feeders"-Lesotho, Malawi, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. Mozambicans and Angolans have increasingly gravitated to remote peni-urban areas, most living in extreme destitution. Southern Africans have largely _. penetrated the established black townships, working as artisans, hawkers, and clerks. The inner- city neighborhoods contain large numbers of Mozambicans, Zimbabweans, Ghanaians, _4l i 9 _ Nigerians, Zairois, and others from Francophone countries. Yet pariah state, South Africa has, for prises ensure that family members would be here." these rough demographic sketches some time now, provided a new are located in different cities to African migration has been mask both the breadth and and significant amplification of maximize marketing opportuni- aided by the expansion of diversity of African immigration. the socio-cultural and economic ties. Various towns and cities unconventional andnonregistered Even within national groupings, configurations upon which much become spokes on a wheel- cross-border trade circuits into the such as the Zairois, there is a mix of Africa's survival depends. feeding back to a central base of South African economy. This of disparate interests and alle- In most African urban commu- operation but also diversifying the expansion has been facilitated by giances. The config,uration ofthe nities there is a persistent disso- business. Long-term community the proliferation of air links and social fabric will be difficult to ciation between paid productive ties may be established, or people well-organized long-distance taxi manage using conventional activities carried out "elsewhere" may be in near-permanent transit. routes that connect Johannesburg policies; its complexity challenges and activities "at home." As More and more Africans are in with cities as far away as Dar es many of the assumptions about residents must travel further afield motion-thereby creating an Salaam, Nairobi, and Kampala. A what it takes to develop urban in search of income, local expandingmarket. host of informal associations, communities. organizations (ethnic, religious, syndicates, and small and For example, the rapid and neighborhood) play an South Africa as a Magnet medium-scale entrepreneurial transformation of the inner city important role in structuring the networks use South Africa's during a time of uncertain often complex connections Many migrants come to South sizable markets and export political transition provided a between multiple communities. Africa because of its strong infrastructure. Because opportuni- framework for many South Urban areas have become economic position relative to the ties for entrepreneurship in most African and foreign nationals to webs of relationships that try to rest of the continent. It allows of Africa rely excessively on establish footholds. Within six sustain family interests and Africans to "go West without investments in already overex- years, the inner city changed from habitat at the same time they going overseas." One Zairois tended trade circuits, the opening 80 percent white to nearly 70 manage a more global economic resident, who at 23 has already up of South Africa has been a continued on pagel55 I SHE URiRn R9E Spring 1994 SOUTH AFRICA continuedfrom page 14 percentblack. The largelyillegal U.S. Conference of Mayors Finds Benefits of or legally marginal status of manv foreignnationalsforceslarge ' Immigrants Outweigh Costs in U.S. Cities segments of these communities to behave in more defensive and clandestine ways. Aj ust-released survey of Refugees and immigrants have African Americans and lb Johannesburg mayors and city officials in 78 also started a number of specialty Cambodianfamilies. cities in the United States found businesses there. All city officials stressed the Already sectors of the central that overall, the benefits of However, many cities have need for federal financial assis- city are close to having a foreign immigration outweigh the experienced problems from the tance to help cities meet the costs majority African population. The problems associated with deliver- presence of both legal immigrants of services to immigrants. Pinellas extent of migratorv flows is best ing specialized services to and undocumented people. Park, Florida, for example. represented by Ponte City, the migrants. The survey also Delivery and financing of health, suggests that it is the federal largest residential building in revealed that immigration affects social, language, and other government's responsibility to Africa. which towers over the cities whether they are large or services are the major problems. provide the social and physical central citv of Johannesburg. With small, and whether they are close In Boston schools, for ex- infrastructure for immigrants. an international orientation and an to or far from international ample, a quarter of all students Local governments simply do not infrastructure which enables it to borders. don't speak English at home and have the resources to do the job. function as a "city within a city," "When many of us think of teachers must find ways to help Seattle, Washington feels that the Ponte has become "Africa's own immigration, we think of them learn. The school system federal government should play United Nations." Certainly no Brownsville, Texas. or San Diego. must translate all its documents an increasing role in promoting where else in Africa have so or New York City," said Louis- into nine languages, which is self-sufficiency among immi- many African nationalities been ville, Kentucky Mayor Jerry time-consuming and expensive. grants. thrown into living arrangements Abramson, President of the U.S. Nevertheless city govermnents On legal inmmigrationi issues, of this densitv. T he result is a Conference of Mayors. "You are devoting a lot of money to Glendale. California officials remarkable mixture of back- don't necessarily think of Louis- helping immigrants. Nearly a called on the federal Immigration grounds, histories, occupations, vil I e, Kentucky or Portland, third of the cities surveycd said and Naturalizatioon Servicc and styles, and survival practices. Oregon. In fact, cities like ours all that they have programs to help federal government to provide Yet for most in Johannesburg, across the country are beginning new innuiiigrants in Lhe resettle- incentives for immigrants to settle Ponte is an intractable problem to experience the effects of ment process. in all parts of the country. rather than a resource to be immigration." Alexandria, Virginia, for Currently one-fourth of all cultivated. For now, it represents The survey found that forcign example, through its City His- immigrants entering the United a sign of the volatility of emerg- born individuals account for panic Orientation and Outreach States settle in Los Angeles ing connections within Africa nearly I I percent of the popula- Program. helps 400 to 600 County, creating a massive rather than one example of how tion of the 78 cities. Officials in immigrants every year. Volun- burden for local and county the continent is increasingly more than a quarter of the cities teers teach such subjects as budgets. As for undocumented integrating itself, despite political surveyed believc that immigrants English, crime prevention, and immigrants, many mayors and turbulence and e conomic crises, were undercounted in the 1990 family planning. Other programs city officials called for increased census. Undercounting results in include a soccer league and a resources for border patrols to Trans Urban less federal assistance to cities, medical clinic. more tightly control the nation's which is key to their fiscal Cities realize that they must borders. Programme survival. not help just immigrants, but also But other cities said that such TIwo out of three cities said need to work with longstanding legal policies must be fairly The African Trans Urban that they have benefited by the residents to encourage and help admiiiistered. Seattle suggested Programme (ATP) is ajoint presence of immigrants, primarily them accept newcomers. that recognition must be given to project of three South African from increased economic devel- In Abilene, Texas, for instance, the undocumented worker's urban development NGOs: omn the Foundation for Contempo- opment, increascd availability of a Human Relations Committee contribution to the larger, global rary Research; a Dakar-based skilled and unskilled labor, and appointed by the mayor opens up economic structure. They NGO; and the African the social and cultural contribu- avenues for conmmiiunity coopera- stressed that policies should American tonstinte in Lagos, tions immigrants make to the tion and communication. "Team remain faithful to the historical Nigeria. ATP tries to better understand how the intensifi- community. Abilene" is a multi-cultural role of the U.S. as a strong world cation of migration and cross- In Fall River, Massachusetts, leadership network that includes leader in the promotion of basic border, inter-urban conven- for example, immigrants operate people ranging from the human rights. tional and unconventional many of the city's bakeries, grassroots level to leadership trade, and entrepreneurial networks are reshaping the restaurants, and shops. Many positions. Hundreds of miles to To obtain a copy of "Immigration urban political economy and local leaders are immigrants or the north in Madison, Wisconsin, Policy Issuesfor America 's social cohesion within urban the children of immigrants. In the Community Action Commis- Cities: A 78-City Suwvev J June commumties. Danbury, Connecticut, refugees sion and the Friends Society have 1994, contact the U.S. Conference and immigrants have heen a major worked on a project to reducec of Mayors, 1620 Eve Street, AN W, 1 source of labor for manufacturing. tensions between a group of Washington. D.C. 20006. THE URRON OGE Spring 1994 Forced Migration in the Former Soviet Union by Arthur C. Helton Arthur C. Helton, a lawyer, is Director of Migration Programs at the Open Society Institute in New York City. For 12 years he directed the I Refugee Project of the Lawyers Committeefor Human Rights. MOSCOW. Moscow today is a independent states, where many into situations of fragile peace, keep up with demand, suffering city of refugees and people are under considerable pressure to others are emerging, such as the and loss of life occur. displaced by conflict and persecu- emigrate. increasing tensions and escalating Civilian Assistance (a Russian tion. Somali asylum seekers In Russia, in addition to rhetoric between political factions NGO) and the New York-based bundle up and wait for assistance asylum seekers from republics of in Ukraine and Crimea over the Lawyers Committee for Human in the winter cold in front of the the former Soviet Union, there are status of Crimea. This is but one Rights, organized a conference in example. The potential for Moscow last year on "NGOs and dislocation is enormous. National- Refugee Protection in the Russian ism, secessionist movements, and Federation." One of the outcomes discriminatory measures are on of the conference was the creation the rise in the former Soviet of the Non-Governmental Union. Some 72 million people Coordinating Council for Aid to live outside the: boundaries of the Refugees and Forced Migrants. republics of their ethnic origin. The aim of this council is to better Altogether, there are some 128 coordinate the efforts of agencies ethnic groups in the 15 countries that work with refugees and of the former Soviet Union. forced migrants in Russia. Network-building among Coping with the Flow NGOs, international organiza- tions, and government agencies UnitedNations' headquarters; approximately 40,000 refugees The Federal Migration Service dealing with migration in Russia Afghans await a solution in a from Afghanistan, Ethiopia, Iran, (FMS) was set up in December has begun. However, much tourist camp on the outskirts of Iraq, and Somalia. Most of these 1991 to begin managing immigra- remains to be done. The capacity Moscow; Armenians from Baku refugees came to Russia en route tion into Russia.. Overall, the of NGOs to monitor implementa- subsist in unused workers' to another country, and are agency is planning to accommo- tion of laws and ensure respect for barracks with little hope for concentrated in Moscow and to a date 200,000 refuigees in the the rights of refuigees and forced resuming a normal life; people lesser extent in St. Petersburg. Russian Federation. However, migrants must be enhanced. If from the Caucasus are denounced While most hope to travel FMS lacks adequate resources achieved in the migration area, and rounded up for deportation. A onward, principally to western and has serious operational such non-governmental efforts continuing low grade social crisis Europe and North America, they problems. For example, only last could provide useful models for affects many Moscovites. But the often find themselves marooned year did the Russian Federation emulati on in other areas. dislocated are particularly in these cities with no effective enact laws concerning forced El vulnerable. access to social protection. They migrants and refugees. Resources This article includes information sleep in airports, train stations, in the independent sector are from an article by the author Russia's Refugees and on the streets; they are part of diffused, and non-governmental which appeared in Migration the new homeless population in organizations (NGOs) are still World Magazine, Volume XXI, Well over one million refugees Russia's major cities. being formed. EBecause these Number 5, 1993. and forced migrants live in emerging arrangements cannot Russia-500,000 refugees and Looking to the Future 700,000 migrants-many of them For rd'hfu Infnrmahnn ethnic Russians. Most are in According to a 1989 census, tIV I tfl0UHIUU Moscow, St. Petersburg, in the over 25 million Russians live in southern regions of Stavropol, the newly independent states. In F mr i op sn Krasnodarsk, and Rostov, or in the foreseeable future, the c M L the central regions of Tula and migration of ethnic Russians may 20-23 Awe po e N c e can Kaluga. increase because of ethnic Rgt 330 Se Many non-Russians gravitate tensions and conflicts in many A New Y New York, 0 to urban areas because of oppor- areas of the former Soviet Union. The Open Soit Isiu i ebh a p c tunities to subsist, or prosper, in Protracted conflicts in the ma in t 1 ct o tn the new informal economy there, Caucasus, Central Asia and a cau flighi. or to try arranging onward travel. Moldova have displaced about m i Ethnic Russians are returning in one millionpeople. While some Sui Ne r NY 10106. Telepone: 12-38 large numbers from the newly of these conflicts have devolved 0634; Fax: -8455. THE U110K RGE Spring 1994 NMM~~------------------------------ Migration Trends in Central and Eastern Europe by Marek Okdlsli Marek Olklski is Professor of Demographiy in the Departmtlent of Economics, and Director of the Polishl Policy Researcih Grorap at the Universitv of Wlarsaw in W1'arsaw, Poland. WARSAW. Sporadic and well Reversing the Flow The Shadow Economy suggests that in 1993, Poland known waves of massive outflows hosted more than 100,000 to the West from Central and Many people who had Dynamically growing markets, migrants in transit, as did the Eastern Europe have been emigrated to the West have together with an expanding Czech Republic. common over the last several returned. In 1989 and 1990 private sector, confronting a Transit migration frequently decades: Hungary in 1956, Hungary witnessed a significant largely inefficient fiscal system, involves sophisticated strategies Czechoslovakia in 1968, and inflow of Hungarian refugees have fostered the development of or illegal border crossings, Poland in 1981. The climax of from East European countries, a shadow economy. This has fed sometimes with the help of this outflow, hidden in the form of and in 1994 Poland faces a on exploited foreign labor, which specialized networks, including tourism, occurrecd in 1988 and repatriation of tens of thousands has been exposed to occupational ,people smugglers." Transit 1989 when 400,000 people of Poles from the former Soviet hazards and deprived of elemen- inigration has become popular in emigrated from Poland. When Union. These trends have brought tary social and health care. Central and Eastern European passport policies were liberalized, about a larger inflow than Visitors from the former cities. Many migrants coming many who had been authorized to outflow of the highly educated. communist countries lack experi- from Eastern Europe, Africa. the make short tourist j ournevs A commol-although almost ence in travelling abroad and their Middle East, and other Asian simply stayed abroad. forgotten-trend in Central and resources are scarce. Often they countries see Central and Eastern Since 1989 international Eastern Europe has been the become desperate, and have been Europe as a convenient "waiting migration in the Czech Republic, inflow of refugees. Czechoslova- driven to crime. In some urban room" in their migration to the Hungary, Poland, and Slovakia kia, Hungary, and Poland hosted areas the presence of migrants has West. has become one of the most tens of thousands of asylum- endangered public order and This inflow of illegal migrants visible signs of the transition to seekers from Africa and Asia. violated sanitary standards. increases the problem of deporta- modern democratic society and an Temporary protection was also Local populations facing new tion and readmission of unwanted open market economy. This given to thousands of displaced transition-related challenges-a foreigners, and contributes to growth has meant rapidly increas- persons from the former Yugosla- decreasing standard of living or social conflicts and nationalism, ing diversification of languages. via. In Hungary alone, more than lack of employment and social especially in urban areas. customs, ways ol dressing, and 1 00,000 refugees were registered contacts with local populations. between 1989 and 1993. In practically all mid- or large- A niew trend has emerged in sized towns, flea markets (often Poland, where thousands of attended, set up. or controlled by foreigners have applied for work foreigners) mushroomed. Visitors permits. Most migrant workers have transformedi city parks, from 1991-1993 were Russ ians suburban areas, and railway and Ukrainians, but permits were stations into canmpgrounds. Street also granted in large numbers to , * corners have become centers of citizens of China and Vietnam, operations for foreign vendors and specialists from the United and professional beggars. Foreign States, the United Kingdom, and visitors have rapidly become Germany. Inex-Czechoslovakia victims of petty crime. The and Hungary, the inflow of Flca tno ir ts. scth as thIls olne ill problem of the inicreasing migrant workers has continued. Poland' h1(r e nt .. presence and participation of Foreigners accept hazardous and foreigners in the transition has low-paying jobs (that are often security-have become increas- Transit migration in Central attracted media and political avoided by local labor). Migrants ingly unfriendly to foreigners. and Eastern Europe reflects a new attention, and contributed to also work in business, banking, phase of integration within the dramatic changesin social and finance. Transit Migration European Union, the transition relations in the region. In some regions, the elevated from socialism in the East, and a Politically motivated emigra- inflow of foreigners has a number Of all new migratory phenom- deeply rooted, dramatic economic tion has disappeared, and the of favorable effects, including ena observed in Central and disparity between the North and outflow of ethnic minorities has stabilizing the market and Eastern Europe, transit migra- South. It is a rapidly growing greatly diminished. At the same increasing the net profits of small tion-a movement to one or more international problem and needs time, short-term migration to enterprises. But, these new countries with an intention to systematic collaboration on a western countries for work has migratory trends have also migrate to yet another country of large international scale. increased in ex-Czechoslovakia, generated serious social and final destination-is the most Hungary, and Poland. economic problems. spectacular. A cautious estimate THE URRRN AGE .Spring 1994 The U.N. Population Conference: A Preview by Hania Zlotnik Hania Zlotnik is Chief of the Mortality and Migration Section of the Population Division of the United Nations. She has been active as the I Technical Secretary for the Expert Group Meeting on Population Distribution and Migration. held as part of the preparatory activities for the International Conference on Population and Development. Migration and urbanization are members of their families who among the major issues to be satisfy certain requirements, Ie ional Cerenc n Put find discussed at the United Nations' treatment equal to that of nation- e o t International Conference on als with regard to certain rights Population and Development and social entitlements. It (ICPD), to be held in Cairo, stresses measures to promote the trn mi o T so m Egypt this September. The integration of long-term migrants Populatio an Dvoe as ies, w is Programme of Action that the and their children, and to combat eek t a new c t p m urba ICPD is expected to adopt in racism and xenophobia. cnsstht got CD wilemphasize the poulation cncerns :should be at 0f:Sneed to 0re:duce urban-rural :V u;e September reflects a comprehen- Measures to deter or combat th ll eon soci t ster environmen- sive preparatory process that has undocumented migration are ol andvironm S ental tal s ledev etof included the views of both experts given prominence, and the role t rlea lnd i and governments. that the governments of countries ti and c t ialiyolife Despite differing concerns and of origin can play in preventing counte ote ub poor. interests expressed by member such migration is recognized. I will adota set * International migratin. states. there appears to be Undocumented migration is r 20 relt sufficient common ground to portrayed as generally undesir- univ a be adss itrocue forge a consensus on most issues able, thus justifying as objectives and es relaed topovrty related to internal and interna- a substantial reduction of the tional migration, number of undocumented Receiving countries in migrants, and the need to address particular expressed concerns the root causes of undocumented about the negative consequences migration. of migration and the view that There is a great need to protect international migration needs to the basic rights of all migrants, be brought under control. particularly by preventing the Member states agreed that "to exploitation of undocumented address the root causes of migrants and safeguarding the migration, especially those relatcd well-being of refugees and to poverty" was an important displaced persons. Combatting objective. In contrast, the Expert the root causes of refugee Group Meeting on Population movements and population Distribution and Migration had displacement is emphasized as underscored that migration has well as the need to find perma- many beneficial effects that nent solutions to their plight, should be recognized and particularly in the form of c t e p t g mor c fostered. Governments were thus repatriation. ilu gsfty 20 i; t hewell-bein urged to manage migration flows In discussing urbanization, the at ri inten social intetio of docu- and developed countries were expert group considered the f i t 1 W t; t encouraged to try to improve the effects of intemational migration t fi skills of migrants from develop- on cities. A review of the integra- C nsolutons ing countries or from countries tion problems faced by intema- N Y t A d t th p o gs with economies in transition. tional migrants in developed of the wording o a draft countries showed that most have Porm of A Documented and settled in cities, and that housing f60 E 4 Undocumented Migrants segregation is common. Experts spell o an enigtee a, noted that the problems of cities I 5245; F : 212-297-52S0. The Programme of Action had often been attributed to the at emphasizes the need to extend to presence of migrants, both rural- * ol distribution, documented migrant workers and continued on page 19 loo TIE UWRN RIGE Spring 1994 NEWSLINE continuedfi o7n pagi 18 to-urban and international. Yet, minority groups are often blamed careful consideration of the unfairly for these problems. N 9 causes of such problems has It is a major step in the right FORUu '9 generally pointed in other direction for the international NGO Forum '94 is an independent gathering of non-governmental directions, including government community to endorse the need to organizations (NGOs) which will be held along side the United Nations' policies on the use of land, the ensure that the basic rights of all International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD). NGO location of industry, or the migrants are respected and to call Forum '94 will be the largest gathering of population, development, provision of housing. for measures to combat racism environmental, human rights, and women's organizations since the and xenophobia. It is also lUNCED Global Forum. Recognizing Div.ersity and important to recognize, as the At NGO Forum '94, the program will focus on sharing lessons Recognizing Diversity and Important to recognize, as the learned in both influencing policy and improving program performance Human Rights Programme of Action does, that in development, family planning, women's empowerment. human rights, large cities often represent "the migration issues, environmental protection, and health. Not all migrants are equal and most dynamic cenLres of eco- The program will include keynote lectures, workshops, group not all are found among the urban nomic and cultural activity in meetings, working groups, panel discussions, daily briefings from the poor. In developed countries,the manycountries"andthatteUN Conference, an international video festival, and NGO exhibits. NGO Forun '94 will be held concurrently with the ICPD, 5-13 migrants "of concern" are those challenges faced by cities can be Septcmber 5-13, 1994 at the Cairo Indoor Sports Stadium near thc identified as belonging to cthnic met through bctter management International Convention Center, vhich will host the official delibera- minorities that are considered to and a more effective use of their tions. The proximity of the ICPD will facilitate government delegates' be different. Religion or race are human resources, including those participation in Forum activities, and allow accredited NGO participants commonly used to distinguish of migrants, both intemal and access to the govemmental deliberations. minorities, who are often the international. For more informalion, contact: TheMon-Governmental Organizo ton targets of discrimination. While _L Plann1ing CommitteeforICPD, 777 United .Vations Plaza. 8th Flour, migration itself is not the cause of The views and opinions expressed N,ew York, New4 York. 10017, USA. Tel.: 212-545-7344, Fax: 212-545- the problems of cities, in times of in this paper are those of the 7581. uncertainty and economic author cJnd do not necessarilv stringency, migrants belonging to reflect those oJ the United Nations. First Person Interview: R Filipina in Home I am a Filipina migrant worker The train inspector, who was paid her studies. My brothers have refused because of these and other living in Rome, Italy. I am the US$ 300 per head, did not collect our to do manual work because they have circumstances. It is a general oldest of eight children, and started passports for inspection by the border been assured of the remittances from practice of Italian employers to working on a farm when I was 16 police, and declared the compart- abroad. Our remittances are not being terminate from work their pregnant years old to help my father support ments empty. We reached Rome used wisely and are spent on domestic helpers. the family. While I was working in safely the foltowing day, where my consumer goods such as color TVs, Child-rearing is another major Manila after earning a Bachelor's aunt was waiting for me. VCRs, and stereos. problem for migrant women. degree, my aunt, who had been Just before I reported to my first WVhen I joined a Filipino migrant especially for undocumented working in Italy as a domestic, sent domestic job, I went to visit an workers' organization, I found out workers. Children being born in me a letter. She said there were international women's organization there were many more problems. One Italy are mostly sent to the plenty of jobs there and she would and volunteered to work during my important problem is that the illegal Philippines under the care of help someone from the family to free time. They offered me a paid job status of many Filipina migrants relatives, or are given up for come join her. I volunteered to go despite the fact that I was undocu- increases their vulnerability to all adoption. In some cases, however, so that I could send money home to mented. A few months later, an forms of exploitation, including women are desperate and the my brothers and sisters. amnesty was granted to all the mistreatment by employers and children are abandoned. Lack of It has been seven years since T undocumented migrants. I was sexual harassment. social services is a major problem left the Philippines by paying a declared a domestic helper by a Another social cost of intema- not only for migrant women, but huge sum to a travel agency (using sympathetic family-a title I still tional migration is that it separates also for Italian women. money borrowed ftiom my aunt) to carry despite being a frill time activist families for long periods. Mothers I have set up, together with a be surreptitiously brought into married to an Italian. A mainstream have gone abroad and left young small group of Filipinas in Rome, a Rome. I left with a passport and a white collar job remains out of my childrcn under the care of husbands or center that offers temporary shelter, round-trip ticket: Manila-Paris- reach. Even if my degree were other relatives and friends. Often, the counseling, education, and referral Amsterdam-Zurich-Manila. I had a recognized in Italy, my '"regulariza- husbands neglect the children and services to Filipina migrant transit visa to France, and tourist tion" would take I 0 years. spend the remittances lavishly on women. visas for the Netherlands and Like all migrant workers, I have alcohol, gambling, and womanizing. Switzerland. My actual destination: been sending money to my family in In fact, the traditional Filipino family Charito Basa is an activist in Rome Italy! thle Philippines. I have become the has started to disintegrate who orks on womiert's io.sues ans I left with a group of 21 other sole breadwinner of my family since In Italy, unwanted pregnancy has spons b Fiericn Ebert Filipinos, mostly women. In Zurich my father died in 1990. And because become a major concern. In the Foundation to monitor and we were in a hotel for one week of these remittances, my family's patriarchal culture of the Philippine influence the process of the th2ird and on the midnight of October 31 economic status-and even their society, single mothers and women preparatory meeting prior to the we took a train. We were locked up work ethic-has changed. My two having children out of wedlock are IC-PD in Cairo on the issue of in two compartments with the other brothers and a sister went to discriminated against. Thousands of international mnigration. instruction not to make any noise. college, but only my sister finished Filipinas have resorted to abortion THE URRRN R6E Spring 1994 mozi --- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- - --- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -: Migration and Cities in Germany by Jochen Blaschke Un .1fochen Blaschcke is the Director of the Berlin Institute for Comparative Social Research in Berlin, Germany. BERLIN. Germany is the pull of people back to Germany. The third group of refugees arc has been increasing, and is the largest receiving country of The radical changes in Eastern Turks and Ku:rds who come in fastest growing economic sector. immigrants in Europe and has Europe have intensified chain many cases to reunite with Today, for example, there are long been a country of immigra- migration. In the past three years, families through the gate of entry about 12,000 Turkish firms in tion. After World War II, the more than one million diaspora of asylum. The remaining two Berlin. German labor market was filled Germans have come into the groups are refugees from Eastern Refugees for the most part with displaced people and those country. Europe, including Russian Jews, have taken on extremely low-paid expelled or forced to emigrate as a and refugees from the Third jobs in niches that are insecure in result of the war. These groups of Diversity of Migrants and World. terms of housing and labor immigrants were quickly inte- Asylum Seekers legislation. Slum-like conditions grated into the labor markets and Berlin Faces New Challenges have developed on the fringes of into society without any open In Germany, immigrant the housing market. In contrast, ethnic discrimination. This group populations can be statistically The heterogeneity of the immi- diaspora immigrants entitled to of immigrants makes up almost a registered by citizenship only. grant population is evident in all German citizenship were, as a quarter of the German population. This makes it impossible to arrive towns and cities. This is certainly rule, privileged in the housing and The economic upswing in the at a precise assessment of the true in Berlin, which in the labor markets, which meant 1950s and 1960s led to the demographic definition of these eastern part of the city is going accelerated integration of these introduction of a system of labor groups. At present, there are about through the transition process of groups. recruitment from elsewhere in 6.5 million foreigners in the German reunification at the same Starting in the late 1 980s, a Europe. Immigrant workers Federal Republic of Germany, time. The larger western part of growth of racist resentments by linked up with the last of the among them approximately 1.3 Berlin has to face up to the marginal parties has emerged. internal migrants from the million children and adolescents. challenge of the pressures of the There is a politicization of what is countryside and were, for the About 28 percent come from world market more than ever known as the "foreigners prob- most part, employed in textile and Turkey, and more than 70 percent before. Since Berlin is situated at lem" by large political organiza- heavy industries. This system of them have been in Germany for the geographical point of intersec- tions. This has been accompanied ended after the economic crisis in more than 10 years. Half a million tion between the post-socialist by excluding immigrants from the the late 1960s and early 1 970s. Turks have unlimited residence East and the capitalist West, the central labor markets and a status. Only a few of them take on city is more prone to the new flourishing of separate ethnic New Trends Since 1970s German citizenship. As of the end migration flows from Eastern economies. of 1992, about 1.5 million Europe than other cities. Family reunions and chain refugees were in Germany. The Economically, the city has to migrations dominated migration estimates of illegal immigrants wage a hard stlruggle in order to patterns in the 1 970s. These range from 200,000 to 1.5 catch up. The autonomous immigration waves, which million. immigrant economy, however, incorporated second and third The inflow of asylum seekers generations of immigrant laborers, in the last few years has been igration N s further added to the pool of low- large-lastnumbering 450,000 ___________________________f______________________________ paid workers. The immigration of persons a year. Asylum seekers M News ia r ta provides family members increased the are made up of five major d on immigratsses durin the costs and demands on the welfare categories of people. An espe- prcdn mt I is designed tO b read state. There are about five million cially large group are Gypsies MIGlATION NS in 3s people in the country today who from Yugoslavia, Romania, and a a io o on r re immigrated in this way. Bulgaria. They have not suc- K p ations. During the 1980s there was a ceeded in integrating themselves Disnbuio is b er mail marked increase in the immigra- into the Germnan labor market and - sn y e add to: Migion tion of diaspora Germans from have not been well accepted in ] =:Xs ludi.e. Eastern European countries. Germany. The second group is 1 . C n bac i c e Generous naturalization and made up of Yugoslavian civil war a dual.ucdavis.edu - integration measures were made refugees who are increasingly N i a be s fax to Philip available to these groups. The admitted through quota proce- - - M a -7- o te conservative governments under dures oT private initiatives. They te c be m to: P Mt D t oAcu Chancellor Helmut Kohl made a are supporting the expansion of E U i fia, is, CA95616, USA. political issue of the ethnic Croatian, Bosnian, Albanian, and Mi Ne by ail or fax Germans and thus intensified the Serbian relief networks. if-email is not available THE OADAN AGE Spring 1994 s ~~~------------------------- --- We activelv seek ouirc developing country readers' inputfor this seclioni. Our7 intenitioni is tofoci/itate networking afmong developing countrv c'i/y managers and their constituents. MIGRANTS IN EUROPE: THE EC'S RESPONSE 2. Gennevilliers, France (Mairle de Gennevilliers, 177 Avenue Gabriel Peri, 92237 Gennevilliers Cedex). Housing for migrants in Western Europe is generally sub- Contacl: Donatellcu Guiibilaro, Directorate Geneeral fbr External Eco- standard. In Gennevilliers, France, for example, almost all nomic Relations, Commission of European Communities, 200 ruie de ia migrants live in housing of very poor quality. Good quality Loi. 1049 Brussels. Belgium. housing is important to the quality of life for migrants, and to their relationships with both fellow migrants and others in the general Since the end of World War ll, large numbers of workers and others population. from the Mediterranean and North Africa have been coming to Western Gennevilliers (France), in the suburbs of Paris, Vila Nova de GaTa Europe. The Commission of European Communities (EC) is trying to (Portugal). Fouchana (Tunisia) and Sale (Morocco ) are all trying to find out more about how and why migrants flock to its member coun- better understand the housing needs of migrants. They are also tries. The EC is also helping establish municipal networks among cities attempting to improve conditions, including rehabilitating old which absorb migrants, and those which send them. buildings. The EC has also helped a number of pilot projects in the Mediterra- One of the main activities of the network is to rehabilitate slum nean and North Africa that are creatingjobs for young people. The districts in Sale. The network also exchanges information and trains projects are designed to help migrants contribute to the economic municipal officials responsible for housing and town planning. The development in their country of origin. netvork hopes European towns can help towns in developing countries in their struggle to improve poor-quality housing occupied Municipal Networks by people who are unable to afford extensive home improvements. The main objective of the networks among cities that absorb and send migrants is to identify problems and situations in which municipalities can intervene in concrete and positive ways. Another objective is to C better enable European, Mediterranean, and North African municipalities to help each other. The networks seek to make migration a key factor in city planning and to transfer "knlow-how" about migration Rows. The aim is to turn potentially problematic situations into gains. Ideally, the networks can - improve the quality of life in medium-size and large cities in the Mediterranean and North Africa so that young people can find alterna- tives to migration. Three Pilot Networks: 1. Frankfurt-am-Main, Gcrmany (Stadt Frankfurt am Main, Thze noumicipal neenvork in Frankfiurt-am-Main, German?, aims to ____ Multikulturelle Angelegenhelten, Barckhausstrasse 1-3, 6000 tidersta7nd why Yooolg people migrate. Frankfurt am Main 1). This network includes Frankfurt and Berlin (Germany), Adena 3. Anderlecht, Belgium (Commune d'Anderlecht, 1, Place du (Turkey), Nador (Morocco), Barcelona (Spain), Lisbon (Portugal). and Conseil, 1070 Bruxelles). Lyons (France). Its goal is to research and analyze information about the The focus of this network is the creation of small businesses and two major migrant populations: young and elderly people. It seeks to the use of migrant savings. Migrants can be catalysts for a new kind answer questions such as: of economic link between sending and receiving countries. * Why are young people migrating? Anderlecht (Belgium), Kenitra, Berkane (Morocco). and Yalova * What can be done to integrate them more effectively into their own (Turkey) are seeking a better understanding of how the use of savings countries so they do not emigrate'? by migrants can help create jobs and businesses both in Western * What can be done so they are better prepared and integrated into Europe and in the countries of origin. This network also wants to the receiving countries of Western Europe? encourage migrants who have gained knowledge of two different * How can young people from the Mediterranean and North Africa countries to use this special knowledge for the benefit of both help develop their regions of origin while they are living in countries. Western Europe? Anderlecht has a long tradition of small enterprises in the food An increasing number of elderly people from the Mediterranean and products sector. As an example, a commercial seafood shop owner North Africa are now retired, but choose to stay in Western Europe and in Anderlecht, from Morocco, could use part of his savings to open a carry on a life shared between two countries and two cultures. production unit in Morocco-buy a fishing boat, employ several * How can the quality of life for elderly migrants be improved? fishennen, and build a cold storage unit. At the same time, he could * How can elderly migrants participate in the development of their develop the distribution side by expanding his business network in country of origin? Anderlecht. THE UR RR R E Sprinig 1994 --~~---------------------------------- International Migration the issue touch on cmigration these cities has widened the gap the edge of the future marked by Review and Migration from former-Yugoslavia, racism between rich and poor, with many uncertainty and the promise of 'World Magazine and ethnic conflict in Russia, the low skilled people being urban innovations. The transfor- deportation of immigrants in marginalized despite their mation of Miami, through waves The Center for Migration France, and Arab citizens and productive contributions. of immigration, holds important Studies of New York, Inc., Palestinian refugees in Lebanon. lessons for all cities in a changing _4 209 Flagg Place, Staten City on th[e Edge: world. Island, New York 10304- The Transformation of 1199, US.A. Cities in a World Miami An Atlas of Economy International Migration The Center for Migration Studies byAlejandro Por/es and Alex beganpublishingInternational by Saskia Sassen. Pine Forge Stepick, University of California by Aaron Segal, Hans Zell Migration Review in 1964. It has Press (A Sage Publications Press, 2120 l'erkeley Way, Publishers, an imprint of become the leading quarterly Company), 2455 Teller Road, Berkeley, California, 94720 Browker-Saur Ltd, a division of journal on human migration and Thousands Oaks, California, U.S.A., 1994. Reed Reference Publishing, 60 refugee movements. Each issue 91320, USA. 1994. Grosvenor Street, London WAX presents original articles, research Political geography has played 9DA, U.K, 1993. and The city is one of the strategic the determini:ng role in making .P documen- sites where global processes Miami into the unique, bilingual, The first comprehensive atlas of tation materialize into concrete eco- multicultural city that it is today. international migration in any notes, nomic and social forms. There is Portes and Stepick arrive at this X language, reports on today a worldwide grid of such conclusion by tracing Miami A.Atl.. this book key cities-from New York and through its early "colonization," " "'lr combines legislative Frankfurt to Sao Paulo and the establishment of the city's maps and develop- Bangkok. powerful Cuban enclave, the text on ments, an Sassen Mariel boat lift, and the Nicara- intema- extensive observes guan exodus. Also included are tional bibliography and abstracting that, in chapters on Miami's black . migration service, The International addition to minorities, the 1980 Miami riot, fromthe Newsletter on Migration, plus a "the new and how Haiti ans have become origins of review of new books in the field. interna- part of Miami's transformation. human beings to the present. It Many articles are relevant to tional This narrative socio-political describes voluntary and involun- readers interested in international , culture" history tary migrations from 1500 to migration and urban areas. that evolved in the 1980s with draws a 1990 and defines the world's Occasional "special issues" explosive growth in international v ivid majordiasporas-Armenians, feature contributions by experts finance, telecommunications, and picture of Cambodians, Chinese, Cubans, on specific topics of emerging information flows, these cities Miami on Haitians, Jews, Kurds, Laotians, relevance to migration theory and attracted a sub-service sector- the edge- Lebanese, Palestinians, Vietnam- policy. which includes secretaries, holding ese and West Indians. Global Migration World Magazine, cleaners, truckers who deliver out hope study abroad, freedom of move- has been published by the Center office supplies, technicians and for a ment by region, international since 1973. The magazine repair workers, and builders. convergence between the city's tourism, and the international focuses on current events and is Many of these vital but underval- polarized ethnic communities, but brain-drain are also considered. aimed at a ued jobs are filled by immigrants. clearly reporting the injustices The Atlas includes a useful broad To survive, many of the iruni- that beset the city' s black minori- glossary of terms, a bibliography, audience of grants to these cities have started ties and variotus ethnic groups. In and a comprehensive index. donors, inforrnal economies and built Miami, white residents, referred Invaluable for the breadth of researchers, strong ethnic communities. Such to as "Anglos," are outnumbered its coverage, the Atlas also academics, diversity is especially apparent in by people of Hlispanic or Carib- includes a section on "world and human the world cities of Europe and the bean origin. The Anglo, Black, cities" which draws a portrait of rights United States where corporate and Latin communities continue seven carefully defined urban groups. power is most concentrated. to create the texture of Miamni's centers that are particularly Published five times a year, it Transnational corporate power political and cultural life. conducive to international provides extensive national and at the top and the new low-wage Portes and Stepick draw on migration. Amsterdam, London, international coverage of migra- workforce at the bottom form a both secondary and original Los Angeles, New York City, tion and refugee movements. The new geography of centrality and research, including surveys of Paris, Sydney, and Toronto were first 1994 issue includes features marginality that in many ways Cuban and Haitian refugees, and selected because they are "active on Haitians in the United States, cuts across the old North-South interviews with city leaders. City in world trade, financial and migration and trade in Japan, and divide. Both are present in major on the Edge is a provocative and services centers, with diversified health care for the foreign-born. cities of the North and South. The readable portrsit of the ethnic economies capable of absorbing Short international news items in move to service economies in kaleidoscope of Miami-a city on unskilled and professional labor." THE URRRI RCE Spring 1994 Below is aselectionl of urban events and trainingcourses culled/ftor The Urban Age's cuerrentfiles. WXe ar-e notalwssaysable to list even7ts nore thlan once, given space limitations. Please refer topastissues ofTheUrban Agefor additional eventsschedlutled in 1994. Send yourrz announcemiients to: The Editor, The Urban Age. Room S4-03, The World Bank, 1818 HStreetN WV'aTVshington DC 20433, USA. Facsimnile. 2.02-52 923294. Conferences N Semarang,Indoncsia August 8-11. 1994. SoutheastAsia Seminar HongKong November7-12. WorldCongress onUrban Growth on the Management of Coastal Towns and Cities. Contact: Advisory and the Environment. Contact: C'ongress Secretariat, 10 Tonsley Committee on Protection of the Sea, 1 I Dartmouth St., London, SWIH Place, London SWIS IBP, U.K. Tel: 081-871-1209, Fax: 081-875- 9BN, UK. Tel: 071-799-3033. Fax: 071-799-2933. 0686. Colombo, Sri Lanka August 22-26, 1994. Water, Engineering and Melbourne, Australia November 20-23, 1994. Cities and the New Development Centre Annual Conference. Contact: Mrs. Rowena Global Economy. Contact: OECD-Australia Conference, The Meeting Steele, WEDC, Loughborough University ofTechnology. Planners, 108 Church St., Hawthorn 3122, Australia. Tel: 03-819- Leicestershire, LEI I 3TU, UK. Tel: 44-509-222-885. Fax: 44-509- 3700, Fax: 03-819-5978. 211079. Cincinnati, Ohio, USA-November 17-20, 1994. Urban Public Cairo, Egypt-September 5-13, 1994. International Conference on Housing. Contact: Professor Wolfgang F. E. Preiser, School of Population and Development, 1994 (ICPD). Contact: ICPD Secre- Architecture, University of Cincinnati, Mail Location 0016, Cincinnati, tariat. 220 E. 42nd St-. 22nd Fl., New York, NY 10017, USA. Tel: 212- Ohio, 45221-0016, USA. Tel: 513-556-6743, Fax: 513-556-3288. 297-5244/5245, Fax: 212-297-5250. NGO Forum '94. Contact: The Non-Governmental Organization Planning Committee for ICPD, 777 Bali, Indonesia-December 5-9, 1994. Health, Economics and United Nations Plaza, 8th Floor, New York, NY, 10017. USA. Tel: Development: Working Together for Change, The Seventh Inter- 212-545-7344, Fax: 202-545-758 1. national Congress of the World Federation of Public Health Associations. Contact: WFPHA Secretariat, c/o APHA, 1015 15th St. Washington, D.C.-September 11-1 4. 1994. Building Partnerships: NW, Suite 300. Washington, D.C. 20005, USA. Tel: 202-789-5696. Worldwide and at Home. Contact: Jerry Delli Priscoli, International Fax: 202-789-5681. Association of Public Participation Practitioners, P.O. Box 823 1 7. Portland, Oregon, 97282, USA. 'T'el. and Fax: 503-236-6630. Calcutta, India-December 15-18. 1994. Environment and Iealth in Developing Countries. Contact: Dr. Rabin Ganguly, Indian Beijing, China-September 15-21, 1994. 14th Eastern Regional Institute of Management-Calcutta, Joka, Diamond Harbor Road, Post Organization for Planning and Housing, World Planning Con- Box 26757, P.O. Alipore, Calcutta 700 027, India. Tel: 91-33-77- gress: Human Settlements Towards 21 st Century. Contact: Mr. 2390, ext. 290: Fax: 91-33-242-1498. Zhang Zhonglian. Congress Secretariat, CICCST/Earoph. 44 Ke Xue Yuan Nan Lu. Shuang Yu Shu, Haidian District, Beijing 100086. China. Education Programs and Coafses Washington, D.C.-September 19-21, 1994. The 2nd Annual World Bank Conference on Environmentally Sustainable Development: National Universitv of Colombia in Medellin-The Faculty of The Human Face of the Urban Environment. Contact: 1994 ESD Architecture will offer a course entitled "Managemiient of Local Conference, Office of the Vice President, Environmentally Sustainablc Governments: Institutional Strengthening and Participation" from Development, The World Bank, 1818 H Street, N.W., Washington, August 14-September 11 1994. Conact: Rafael Rueda Director D.C. 20433, USA. Tel: 202-473-5546, Fax: 202-473-3112. CEHAP, 4th Fl., Block 24, Faculty of Architecture, National tJniver- New Delhi, India October 4-7 1994. International Indian Human siy ofColombia. Medel in. Colombia. Tel: 230-0040, Fax: 230-9630. Settlements Programme Seminar: Integrated Urban Infrastructure University of Bristol-The School for Advanced Urban Studies Development. Contact: Dr. Kulwant Singh, Human Settlement Managepment. Ionstictut 212, Asant GSVillage, KSettleo M g S (SAUS) offers policy seminars, short courses, workshops and graduate Management Institute, 212, Asian Games xvillage, Khelgaon Marg, Siri Fort. New Delhi, 110 049, India. Tel: 91-11-649-3099, Fax: 9 1-11 - degrees, on such subjects as urban employment and labour markets, 649-3726. health and social care, housing, organizations, and policy change. Contact: SAUS, The University of Bristol, Rodney Lodge, Grange San Jose, Costa Rica-October 24-28, 1993. The Third Meeting of Road, Bristol. BS8 4EA. UK. Tel: 0272-741-117, Fax: 0272-737-308. the International Society for Ecological Economics. Contact: ISEE- 94 Costa Rica Conference Secretariat, P.O. Box 555-3000. 1 leredia, Centre for African Settlement Studies and Development Offers Costa Rica. Tel: ';06-60-1 600, Fax: 506-37-6868. training courses throughout the year, on topics such as techniques of environmiental impact assessinenit and urban waste management Shanghai, China-October 26-28. 1994. The International Sympo- strategies. Contact: Prof. A.G. Onibokun, The Secretary-General. sium on Metropolitan Development and the Environment. Contact: Center for African Settlement Studies and Development, No. 3 Ayo Prof Jiang Yanyin, Secretaiy of the Organizing Commifilittee, 508 Adek1unle Close, New Bodija Estate, U.I., P.O. Box 20775. lbadan, Qinzhou Rd., Shanghai 200233, P.R. China. Fax: 96-21-4398279. Nigeria. Tel: 22-712-727, Fax: 22-414-536. THEURRRN AGE Spring 1994 INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION LETTERS TO THE EDITOR continued from page 5 continuedfromn page 2 Reducing Fear of Migration *The feminization of migra- Editor: Editor: tlion: women play dn increas- Migration and minorities are ingly important role in all regions The Institute of Labor Manage- I am writing from Nigeria. seen as a danger to living and types of migration. ment & Research is a non-profit, Conditions of cities here *J[Tfl standards, life styles, and The inescapable central trends NGO that carries out labor represent the intractable ; social cohesion. Extreme- are the increasing ethnic and research. Labor needs to be a key problems facing all urban right parties have grown and cultural diversity of most component in any strategy for centers in developing flourished through anti- countries, the emergence of sustained socio-economic countries. The solutions to these immigrant campaigns. Hostility trans-national networks which development. Through our problems lie not only in financial to immigrants and ethnic minori- link the societies of emigration research we assist in the review assistance, but also in the attitude ties-whether labelled racism, and immigration, the growth of and formulation of labor policies of people. xenophobia or ethnocentrism- cultural interchange, and the in India, and also the implementa- Existing institutional frame- has become a major political issue trend towards increasing urban- tion of corrective measures. For works for providing urban in most countries of immigration. ization and the development of Racism is a threat, not only to global cities. The globalization example, we are starting a services often do not function. immigrants themselves, but also of migration does give some research proj ect on the urban For example, the most successful to democratic institutions and hope of increased unity in labor market and the problems environmental projects are social order. Analysis of the dealing with the pressing caused by excessive urbanization. generally those that have involve( causes and effects of racism must problems which beset our small We would like to work with other direct citizen participation at the therefore take a central place in planet. organizations with a similar grassroots level. Where people any discussion of international fl strategic focus. It would be of once looked to the state to solve migration and its effects on Stephen Castles has been immense help to be placed in difficulties in the economy, societv. Director of the Centre for contact with organizations who commerce, housing, and the All countries of immigration are Multicultural Studies at the might be able to collaborate with environment, they now have going to have to re-examine their University of Wollongong in us in our research work. doubts that the government or understanding of what it means to Australia since 1986. Previ- local councils can solve these belong to their societies. Com- ously, he taught sociology and Ruffus Moses problems for them. paring migration movements political economy at the Poly- Institute of Labor Mt/anagement & Solutions to our urban prob- around the world, it is possible to technic of Frankfurt, Germany. Research lems will increasingly rely on identify certain general tenden- Mark J. Miller is Associate Post Box 1054, Kilpauk grassroots participation. But cies, which are likely to play a Professor of Political Science at Madras 600 010, people must be helped to organizt major role in the next 20 years: the University of Dela-ware. He India themselves and must be given the - The globalization of migra- is also an associate of the Center encouragement and confidence to lion: the tendency for more for Migration Studies in New initiate and take actions for countries to be affected by York, which publishes the themselves. There, I think, lies migratory movements at the same International Migration Review. the challenge for the new Urban time. This article was adapted from - The acceleration of migra- The Age of Migration: Interna- Age. tion: migrations are growing in tional Population Movements in Photo credits: p. I (New York City) AP/ volume in all major regions of the the Modern World by Stephen Wide World Photos; p 4 (map) Age of U. W Ob, Migrationi, see complete citation on page University of Nigerit world. Castles and Mark J. Miller, 24; p. 7 (Vancouver) Barbara Pettit; p. 8 Nigerh *The dfferentiation of 1993, published by The Guilford (Washington, D.C.)Nestor Hemandez; p. migration: most countries do not Press, A Division of Guilford 10 (Hanoi) Population Reference Bureaa/ simply have one type of immigra- Publications, Inc., 72 Spring Terrv Hull; p. 14 (Johamnesbhug) Johin M. hyj. lon a Courtney; p. 16 (Moscow) John M. ln J tion, such as labor migration, Street, New York, NY, 10012, Courtney; p. 1713arbara Koeppel; p. 18 refugee, or permanent settlement. U.S.A. (Cair-o) Boinie Bradford p. 21 feny to Th refugee, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Istanbul) MaTy Rose Curis. UbnAewl eo rvtzto |0an(dCitiese :look tforwarda :to050 f2l ,- -7 r fl thoughts on this upcoming issue. ..9,~~~~~~~~~~~I93 . . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~The Ufrbon Age is printed by i..iR.nls4f*315 1ai&PstNWAv.nrnngtort ~~~~~~~~REPRODUCTIONS, INC. on I NA ME ______________________________________________________ ~~~~~~recycled paper using soy-based THE URRRN RGE Spring 1994