Diversification trends in moldovan international migration: Evidence from czechia and Italy
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DRBOHLAV, Dusan, BAILEY, Adrian J., CERMAK, Zdenek, CERMAKOVA, Dita, LOZOVANU, Dorin, MASNA, Eliska, PAVELKOVA, Lenka, SEIDLOVA, Marketa, STOJANOV, Robert, VALENTA, Ondrej, VIETTI, Francesco. Diversification trends in moldovan international migration: Evidence from czechia and Italy. In: Acta Universitatis Carolinae, Geographica, 2017, nr. 2(52), pp. 237-248. ISSN 0300-5402. DOI: https://doi.org/10.14712/23361980.2017.19
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Acta Universitatis Carolinae, Geographica
Numărul 2(52) / 2017 / ISSN 0300-5402 /ISSNe 2336-1980

Diversification trends in moldovan international migration: Evidence from czechia and Italy

DOI:https://doi.org/10.14712/23361980.2017.19

Pag. 237-248

Drbohlav Dusan1, Bailey Adrian J.2, Cermak Zdenek1, Cermakova Dita1, Lozovanu Dorin3, Masna Eliska1, Pavelkova Lenka1, Seidlova Marketa1, Stojanov Robert1, Valenta Ondrej1, Vietti Francesco4
 
1 Charles University,
2 Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong,
3 Institute of Ecology and Geography of the ASM,
4 University of Turin
 
 
Disponibil în IBN: 15 martie 2022


Rezumat

This contribution advances knowledge of contemporary Moldovan migration and is the first comparative description of the situation of Moldovans in Czechia and Italy. Our specific objective is to review evidence about how the concept of the migration-development nexus applies to the Moldovan situation. In the absence of comparable primary data on Moldovan migration our research design uses mixed methods and triangulates data from Moldova and across the main destinations for Moldovan migration, including Italy and Czechia. In addition to confirming prior research on the significance of remittances to the Moldovan economy since 1991, we report three additional findings. First, Moldovan migrants, particularly women who may work as domestic workers are often invisible and undercounted. Second, Moldovan migration is rapidly diversifying, with new destinations, selectivities, and forms and modes of mobility. Third, the global economic recession of 2008 had different implications for Moldovan migration patterns to and from Czechia and Italy. We conclude with a specific call for research that extends the migration-development nexus by examining social remittances and the mobility and labour strategies of Moldovan family reunifiers. The paper also argues for availability of robust data that would allow comparative analysis of international migration and could better support evidence-based debates about migration.

Cuvinte-cheie
Czechia, international migration, Italy, Labour markets, Moldova, Moldovan migrants