Academic literature on the topic 'Greek migration'

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Journal articles on the topic "Greek migration"

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Korma, Lena. "The historiography of the Greek Diaspora and migration in the twentieth century." Historein 16, no. 1-2 (June 30, 2017): 47. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/historein.8778.

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The aim of this paper is to provide a critical overview of the literature on the Greek diaspora and migration during the twentieth century. In others words, this study attempts to offer a historiographical approach, focusing mainly on Greek-language literature and, in particular, on landmark works in Greek migration studies. Anyone attempting to write about the history of Greek migration is faced with a daunting task, considering that a series of individual concepts must be clarified and positioned in space and time. Migration in modern Greek history is not a phenomenon exclusive to the twentieth century; the permanent presence of Greeks in central Europe from the fifteenth to nineteenth centuries incited the interest of a significant number of Greek historiographers in the twentieth century. In this context, for instance, the use during the twentieth century in the Greek-language literature of terms such as apodimos, apoikia, paroikia or repatriation reflects ruptures and continuities and illuminates the political changes in Greek society and the broader ideological shift in socials sciences. At the same time, the early post-junta period marked not only a systematic shift towards the study of the Greek diaspora and migration, but also a differentiation in its approach by entering into continuous dialogue with other disciplines. However, because diaspora and migration studies is now an interdisciplinary field, an overall analysis of it lies beyond the scope of this work.
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Nanton, Philip. "‘All that Greek manure under the green bananas’: Migration in Derek Walcott’s Omeros and Homer’s The Odyssey." Migration Studies 6, no. 3 (January 27, 2018): 472–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/migration/mnx068.

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Karatsareas, Petros. "Linguistic (il)legitimacy in Migration Encounters." Languages 6, no. 2 (April 2, 2021): 66. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/languages6020066.

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Linguistic differences between groups of co-ethnic and/or co-national migrants in diasporic contexts can become grounds for constructing and displaying identities that distinguish (groups of) migrants on the basis of differences in the sociohistorical circumstances of migration (provenance, time of migration) and/or social factors such as class, socioeconomic status, or level of education. In this article, I explore how language became a source of ideological conflict between Greek Cypriot and Greek migrants in the context of a complementary school in north London. Analysing a set of semi-structured interviews with teachers, which were undertaken in 2018 as part of an ethnographically oriented project on language ideologies in Greek complementary schools, I show that Greek pupils and parents, who had migrated to the UK after 2010 pushed by the government-debt crisis in Greece, positioned themselves as linguistic authorities and developed discourses that delegitimised the multilingual and multidialectal practices of Greek Cypriot migrants. Their interventions centred around the use of Cypriot Greek and English features, drawn from the linguistic resources that did not conform with the expectations that “new” Greek migrants held about complementary schools and which were based on strictly monolingual and monodialectal language ideologies. To these, teachers responded with counter-discourses that re-valued contested practices as products of different linguistic repertoires that were shaped by different life courses and trajectories of linguistic resources acquisition.
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Efiloğlu, Ahmet. "The Discussions of Greek Migration and Greek Deportation in Ottoman Deputies Assembly." History Studies International Journal Of History Volume 4 Issue 1, no. 4 (2012): 171–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.9737/hist_424.

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Piperoglou, Andonis. "Migrant Labour and Their “Capitalist Compatriots”: Towards a History of Ethnic Capitalism." Labour History: Volume 121, Issue 1 121, no. 1 (November 1, 2021): 175–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/jlh.2021.23.

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The relationship between migration and Australian capitalism has long been a topic of robust scholarly debate in sociology and economics. Researchers in those fields have highlighted how migration has left an indelible imprint on Australian capitalism. By contrast, Australian migration histories have given scant attention to the role ethnic groups played in Australian capitalism. This lack of attention is particularly curious in historical studies of Greek Australia given the significance of small business in facilitating migration and settlement. From Federation onwards, Greek ethnic capitalism - or, more precisely, the relations between Greek migrant labourers and their petite bourgeoisie employers - became a topic of media coverage. In fact, the relations between Greek workers and employers were so important that newspapers routinely reported on the subject. This article examines this media coverage, its racialist and criminalising connotations, and historical relevance. It concludes with some observations on how histories of capitalism can productively engage with the histories of ethnicisation.
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Knight, John Brendan. "Migration theory and ‘Greek Colonisation’. Milesians at Naukratis and Abydos." Revista do Museu de Arqueologia e Etnologia, no. 33 (December 12, 2019): 45–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.11606/issn.2448-1750.revmae.2019.169246.

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With the application of post-colonial theoretical approaches in the last decades of the twentieth century CE, the study of archaic Greek overseas settlement has arrived at something of a terminological and methodological impasse. Scholars continue to debate whether Mediterranean and Black sea settlement can legitimately be termed ‘colonisation’ yet attempts to modify this language of imperialism have thus far failed to achieve significant alteration of the overarching paradigms. This paper will suggest a new approach to these problems using contemporary migration theory to conceptualise archaic Greek mobility and settlement, through the case studies of Milesian migration to Naukratis in Egypt and Abydos in the Troad during the 7th century BCE. Drawing on aspects of structuration and practice theory, it will seek to describe and explain the multi-faceted structures, practices and agency involved in the migration of Milesian Greeks to these areas. The two chosen case studies will be compared to understand how spatial, social, cultural and political factors may have impacted upon the characteristics of Naukratis and Abydos and the multitude of stimuli surrounding their settlement. This will provide ways to re-envisage an important period of Mediterranean history, offering a flexible methodological approach to be utilised in other contexts.
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Kerpaci, Kalie, and Martin Kuka. "The Greek Debt Crisis and Albanian Return Migration." Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies 21, no. 1 (November 9, 2018): 104–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19448953.2018.1532689.

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Avgoulas, Maria-Irini, and Rebecca Fanany. "Migration, Identity and Wellbeing in Melbourne Australia - The Idea of being Greek in Diaspora." ATHENS JOURNAL OF SOCIAL SCIENCES 8, no. 3 (May 25, 2021): 211–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.30958/ajss.8-3-4.

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Both maintenance and transmission of Greek cultural identity are central to people of Greek descent living in diaspora, regardless of whether the individuals involved are immigrants or the descendants of immigrants. The ‘idea of being Greek’ often represents a positive resource for personal and group identity, even though what constitutes being Greek may be different depending on the cultural lens through which it is viewed in the experience of each generation. Nonetheless, core domains associated with the concept of being Greek include the Greek language, the Greek Orthodox religion and various daily cultural practices. This paper will discuss findings across a number of recent studies undertaken in Melbourne, Australia taking an emic and etic perspective that all utilize the emergent methodology of narrative ethnography to explore migration, identity and wellbeing in the Greek community as well as the idea of being Greek in diaspora. The results suggest that there are emotional benefits associated with cultural identity and overall positive wellbeing and that, for those living in diaspora, whether migration was planned or not, a cultural community, cultural activities and membership in a distinct group are positive resources in fostering social connectedness. From a social perspective on health, this extends beyond the physiological/clinical elements of health and wellbeing and emphasizes the various social and intangible benefits of positive outlook and the very significant role that culture, and cultural practices play in the group social context by contributing to the perception of health and wellbeing in the Greek diaspora community across generations. Keywords: Culture, identity, wellbeing, Greek identity, migration
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Travlos, Antonios K., Panagiotis Dimitropoulos, and Stylianos Panagiotopoulos. "Foreign player migration and athletic success in Greek football." Sport, Business and Management: An International Journal 7, no. 3 (July 10, 2017): 258–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/sbm-02-2016-0006.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine the migration of foreign football players that participated in the elite football championship in Greece and the impact of this migratory channel on the athletic success of the football clubs. Design/methodology/approach The study analyzed a database of all migrant and local athletes that participated in the professional Greek football championship over the period 2001-2013 and performed descriptive and regression analyses. Findings The regression analyses revealed a positive and significant statistical relation between the investment in foreign talents and the position of the clubs in the championship; however, this impact was more intense for foreign athletes after the formation of the Greek Super League (SL) in 2007 but on the contrary native athletes seem to contribute less to the athletic success than their foreign counterparts. Practical implications The findings indicated that valuable resources where spent after SL formation for the acquisition of foreign well-trained athletes. Therefore, this study corroborated arguments in previous research that a basic reason for foreign player migration in football is the increased revenues accrued from the media and sponsors. The study also provided useful policy implications for football managers for improving their decisions on this matter. Originality/value The present study fills a gap in the empirical literature and contributes significantly on the ongoing debate about the international athletes’ migration and its impact on athletic success.
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Eliou, Marie. "MOBILITY OR MIGRATION?: THE CASE OF GREEK STUDENTS ABROAD." Higher Education in Europe 13, no. 3 (January 1988): 60–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0379772880130308.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Greek migration"

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Christou, Anastasia. "Narratives of place, culture and identity : second-generation Greek-Americans return home." Thesis, University of Sussex, 2003. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.289233.

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Xideas, Evagelos. "A study of the determinants of migration : the case of Greek migration to West Germany 1960-1982." Thesis, Loughborough University, 1986. https://dspace.lboro.ac.uk/2134/7489.

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In the period following the end of World War II, Western European countries have experienced rapid economic growth. In the second half of the fifties, labour shortages emerged, obliging developed countries to have recourse to foreign labour in order to maintain high growth rates. During the sixties, bilateral agreements between European industralised countries (West Germany, France, Sweden, Belgium ... ) and less developed Mediterranean countries (Spain, Portugal, Greece, Yugoslavia, Turkey ... ) produced large-scale migration in Western Europe. The main bulk of Greek emigration has been directed towards West Germany, reaching a peak in 1971, while the reverse flow of returning migrants exceeded emigration from 1974 up to 1981. Data concerning these two flows, from 1960 to 1982, give us the opportunity to test the determinants of both outward and return migration using models based on the Neo-classical, the Keynesian and the Human Capital theories. Under the Neo-classical assumptions about labour and product markets, migration of labour is explained by income differentials prevailing between two regions. The Keynesian model adds unemployment as a cause of migration. Because of the static framework concerning the above models, expectations about future income resulting from migration have been introduced to make the model dynamic. Under the Human Capital theory, migration will occur if the present value of the expected benefits exceeds the present value of the expected costs resulting from migration. Empirical tests of the above model's using OLS or other methods attempting to overcome econometric problems, are presented. Logarithmic forms of emigration equations present the best results. The logarithmic form implicitly assumes that emigration is of a Cobb-Douglas type function. Because of the weaknesses concerning Cobb-Douglas type functions, a translog type emigration function is determined and tests are applied in order to find the best estimation provided by the two functions. Next, we consider migration decisionmaking at the level of an individual who seeks to maximise his welfare in conditions of uncertainty. Introducing utility functions and risk coefficients, the maximisation of welfare yields a stochastic migration function. Furthermore, we examine the migration decision in a binary choice model context. The potential migrant has to decide whether to migrate or not, and an application of the binary logit probability model enables us to estimate the probability that an individual drawn at random from the population will choose to migrate. Finally, we estimate emigration and return migration functions together with employment (or unemployment) and wages functions in a simultaneous equations system in order to avoid simultaneous bias resulting from interdependence between migration and other variables used as explanatory in the previous models.
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Paidoussis, J. A. "Factors affecting spatial labour mobility patterns in Greece in the period 1951-81 : An econometric analysis." Thesis, University of Reading, 1988. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.234368.

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Tziamalis, Alexander. "Processes of international student migration in the UK : Greek and Chinese students in Sheffield." Thesis, University of Sheffield, 2010. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/15111/.

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This thesis is concerned with student migration to the UK. The research objectives of this study are to investigate the personal, familial and social processes pertaining to international student migration and to contribute to the theorization of migration. To further its research objectives the study adopts a grounded theory approach which allows students to voice the concerns, motives and influences pertaining to their migration actions and intentions. The method of the inquiry is qualitative and is based on individual, in-depth, interviews with Greek and Chinese students at the University of Sheffield. In order to interpret and analyse its findings, this research employs the work of Pierre Bourdieu and the Life-course approach on migration. Further, these two distinct bodies of work are combined into a theoretical framework able to further social scientific understanding of migration decision-making. This study brings forward the concept of an intended migration trajectory as a theoretical tool with the potential to enhance our understanding of the migration process. Student migration is found to be a response to the individual and familial needs and ambitions generated by the context in which agents move. Individual actions and intentions are part of an effort to further needs and ambitions in multiple spheres of activity in the best possible way. Migration is best described as a process in the sense that migration partly alters the context facing individuals and families and so contributes to a partial change in agents' needs, ambitions and, ultimately, migration intentions. Overall, this study accomplishes its objectives to investigate Greek and Chinese student migration to the UK and to further social scientists' theoretical understanding of 21st century migration flows.
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Alexandrou, Penelopi. "Hellenic female migration and a Greek Canadian legacy : social networks, cultural continuity and economic development of the women of the Halifax Greek code." Thesis, Kingston University, 2013. http://eprints.kingston.ac.uk/30009/.

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This thesis explores the dynamic social networks, economic development and cultural continuity of the female members of the diasporic Greek community of Halifax, Nova Scotia. In an effort to address a gap in gendered and regional Greek Canadian community studies, this study utilizes the intersection of gender and place through time for a defined social group, as it investigates the development of diverse social and economic relationships in addition to forms of cultural communication. Using an ethnographic approach, this study attempts to understand the lives and interactions through time, which constitute the social and economic networks and define the identities of the female members of the Halifax Greek community. Approximately forty people, mainly women, who indicated participation or membership in the Halifax Greek community, were recruited for life history interviews, while informal unstructured conversations or interviews were conducted with additional participants during participant observation. The participants ranged in age and represented both migrants and subsequent generations. This approach to fieldwork, conducted intermittently, provided an opportunity to witness and acquire diverse data on various community events and aspects of daily life. Moreover, with ethnographic engagement, the way people, particularly women, negotiated their identities across time and space was considered. The study supports the greater agency of post-World War 11 Greek female migrants in the decision-making process of their migration and rejects their migration as consequential or secondary; their shift from sponsored to sponsors facilitated further migration for co-ethnics of extended kin networks and their status as co-breadwinners was essential to the well-being of the Greek migrant family units. Socioeconomic networks have shifted from highly gendered and ethnic networks, initially established out of necessity to ones defined by individual preferences and needs, which do not discard the significance of kin and ethnic connections in their entirety. Concerns for cultural continuity persist for the dynamic community as they continue to redefine their unique hyphenated Greek-Haligonian identity, much like the Halifax donair delicacy, a variation of a Greek dish, influenced by characteristics of Halifax.
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Katartzi, Eugenia. "Narrating identities and educational choices : the case of migrant and Greek young people." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/5987.

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The processes of educational decision making and formations of identity lie at the heart of the present thesis that explores the narratives of twenty-three young people with migrant and nonmigrant background. The thesis analyzes the cases of eleven Greek and twelve migrant participants, of Albanian, Georgian, Armenian and Palestinian ethnicities attending two upper secondary Lyceums in Greece, one sub-urban Vocational and one inner-city Comprehensive located in the city of Thessaloniki. The narratives of young people are analyzed as performative acts and as social practices constructed locally and intersubjectively, rather than as expressions of their essentialist realities. The narrative analysis aims more specifically at demonstrating empirically the social conditionings of school choice and the intricate ways that decision-making is cross-cut by and implicated in the processes of identity formation and negotiation. The educational choices these young people are called to make are situated within the broader socioeconomic and discursive milieu and within the structural arrangements of the post-16 institutional landscape of Greece. The issue of youth agency as grappling against the structural limitations of a given milieu, with its cultural particularities is at the backdrop of the present qualitative study. Young people’s identities are conceptualized as being produced, negotiated and contested in a shifting context through the interactions with significant others, namely their peers, teachers and families and through the interplay of identifications, social positions, capitals, transforming individual habituses and the institutional contexts of the two schools. In more detail, the subjectively felt classed, ethnic and gendered positions are analyzed as perceived, invested and discoursively performed by the young participants. Central role is attributed to the notion of habitus as embodying the complex interweaving of dispositions, discourses, collective and individual histories. It is argued that the processes of activation and re-conversion of capitals (economic, social, cultural) in which young people engage, along with the dynamic change of habitus in the face of evolving conditions in the host country, can be a potentially useful conceptual schema for understanding the ways migrant and non-migrant young people experience and make sense of their positioning in social space. The processes of drawing distinctions between perceived others and themselves mediate the ways young people engage in the weaving of their identities through a more or less ascribed, constrained and perpetually negotiated sense of belonging. In addition analytical attention is paid to the parental engagement and in particular the resources and dispositions that young people’s families invest and transmit in relation to their schooling and their academic and occupational future. In this frame the narrated educational choices are embedded in young people’s learner identities and familial histories and are closely linked with their projections and envisioning of the future. To conclude, the decision-making dynamics emerge through a matrix weaved by differing resources, positions and dispositions that grant young people with unequal opportunities for constructing selfnarratives and engaging with school choice.
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Antonakakis, Nikolaos, and Alan Collins. "The Impact of Fiscal Austerity on Suicide: On the Empirics of a Modern Greek Tragedy." Elsevier, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2014.04.019.

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Suicide rates in Greece (and other European countries) have been on a remarkable upward trend following the global recession of 2008 and the European sovereign debt crisis of 2009. However, recent investigations of the impact on Greek suicide rates from the 2008 financial crisis have restricted themselves to simple descriptive or correlation analyses. Controlling for various socio-economic effects, this study presents a statistically robust model to explain the influence on realised suicidality of the application of fiscal austerity measures and variations in macroeconomic performance over the period 1968-2011. The responsiveness of suicide to levels of fiscal austerity is established as a means of providing policy guidance on the extent of suicide behaviour associated with different fiscal austerity measures. The results suggest (i) significant age and gender specificity in these effects on suicide rates and that (ii) remittances have suicide-reducing effects on the youth and female population. These empirical regularities potentially offer some guidance on the demographic targeting of suicide prevention measures and the case for 'economic' migration. (authors' abstract)
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Dounia, Margarita. "Your roots will be here, away from your home : migration of Greek women to Montreal 1950-1980." Thesis, McGill University, 2004. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=81483.

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Ce travail est une analyse historique de l'experience migratoire feminine, examinee par le coin de femmes emigrants grecques. Le zenith de l'emigration grecque au Canada se date aux premieres annees apres la Deuxieme Guerre Mondiale, quand la situation politique, economique et sociale en Grece combinee avec les regulations etabli par le Canada sur l'emigration ont contribue au mouvement des plusieurs femmes grecques vers ce qui semblait comme un 'meilleur future'. Cette these qui tient comme base les temoignages oraux, examine les fonds des femmes grecques, leurs experiences au Canada, leurs activites et leurs identites transnationales.
Bien que plusieurs travaux d'academiciens on analyse la perspective feminine de phenomenes migratoires, peu d'attention est attribue au cas des femmes de l'Europe du Sud (une categorie d'emigrants un favorise) comme les Grecs. En plus, plusieurs travaux ont echoue de creer une analyse profonde et sensitive vers feminite, que pourra surmonter les stereotypes, les prejuges et les preconceptions sur feminite. Cette approche aspire d'introduire une dimension analytique importante, cella du transnationalisme, concernant les roles sociaux, les identites et les activites des femmes emigrants grecques. Finalement les temoignages oraux atteint un role central pour le caractere et la realisation de cette these.
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Zinonos-Lee, Alexia. "Migration and community formation : narratives of three generations of women living in a Greek Cypriot diaspora community." Thesis, University of East Anglia, 2014. https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/52681/.

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Migration is a global phenomenon and the varied social and individual nature of relocation, has led to cross-disciplinary perspectives of a process, both physical and emotional which forms a significant part of a person’s life. Historically, migration has been largely studied from a male perspective and has not specifically reflected the experiences of women. There has been a move towards recognising the need to study the experiences of female migrants. Cypriot migrants’ experiences, like those of women, have also been relatively neglected, with studies on migrant groups focusing upon more visible, larger groups for example, migrants from the West Indies, Africa and South Asia. Cypriots, along with Italians, Spanish and Portuguese have been overlooked ‘invisible migrants’. This ethnographic study focuses upon the Greek Cypriot community living in Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, a unique; small; rather isolated community. Most of its’ members originate in the same village in Cyprus and were initially involved in the service industry. The ethnography involved narrative interviews; a focus group; a virtual ethnography; participant observations; and the collection of documentation and photographic evidence. Drawing upon the theoretical concept of social capital, this thesis contributes to the understanding of the formation, transformation and erosion of this migrant community. It tells the story of how the community first began, how different organisation and institutions came to be and how these are eroding through the fluid processes of ‘bonding’ and ‘bridging’ capital. Findings from the research highlight women’s stories of migration and how they account for the process of migration; how they experience, maintain and challenge community boundaries which relate to feelings of inclusion and exclusion. The traditional role and expectations of women emerged from this research through the women’s stories of control, and this serves to fill a gap in knowledge around the experiences of female migrants living within this unique community.
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Petracou, Electra V. "Exploring the social and historical dimensions of migration in the European context with special reference to the Greek case." Thesis, University of Warwick, 1999. http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/4312/.

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This thesis examines migration as a contemporary social phenomenon. Adopting Marxian dialectics, migration is defined as a form and as a process of social relations. Thus, migration exists as a differentiated but also as an internal part of social totality. This social totality, as a historical result, constitutes the general social framework within which migration is examined. This study of migration starts from the examination of this particular social organisation of social relations. Migration as an international phenomenon is explored through migration policies and flows, alongside with the relationship between national and international contexts. Moreover, the analysis focuses on a new territorial political organisation, the EU, and its interaction with migration. Furthermore, this study explores the ways that migration is constructed in a specific national context, that of the Greek state. Particularly, the interest in on the ways that migration is included in the social and political process in Greek society. Finally, the analysis focuses on people's experience as migrants in Greece, which is examined through structural social characteristics and attitudes, in order to illustrate that migration means a process of being constructed as a 'migrant' depending on both general and specific social contexts.
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Books on the topic "Greek migration"

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Michalopoulos, Constantine. Migration chronicles. Lusby, MD: Point of View Pub., 2008.

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Afentoulis, Melissa N. Greek Islander Migration to Australia since the 1950s. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-85661-8.

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Anthias, Floya. Ethnicity, class, gender, and migration: Greek-Cypriots in Britain. Aldershot, England: Avebury, 1992.

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Balta, Venetia. Problèmes d'identité dans la prose grecque contemporaine de la migration. Paris: L'Harmattan, 1998.

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Greek diaspora and migration since 1700: Society, politics, and culture. Burlington, Vt: Ashgate Pub. Limited, 2009.

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Tamis, A. M. From migrants to citizens: Greek migration in Australia and Canada. Melbourne: National Centre for Hellenic Studies & Research, La Trobe University, 2002.

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Zweite Generation und Rückwanderung: Rückkehr in die Heimat oder in die Fremde? : eine empirische Studie zur Remigration griechischer Jugendlicher. Saarbrücken: Breitenbach, 1986.

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Transatlantic subjects: Acts of migration and cultures of transnationalism between Greece and America. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004.

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The Baltic origins of Homer's epic tales: The Iliad, the Odyssey, and the migration of myth. Rochester, Vt: Inner Traditions, 2005.

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Petracou, Electra V. Exploring the social and historical dimensions of migration in the European context with special reference to the Greek case. [s.l.]: typescript, 1999.

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Book chapters on the topic "Greek migration"

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Cleland, Andrea. "The Pear Tree: Family Narratives of Post-War Greek Macedonian Migration." In Remembering Migration, 141–54. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-17751-5_10.

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Makrygianni, Vasiliki. "Migrant squatters in the Greek territory." In Migration, Squatting and Radical Autonomy, 248–56. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2017. | Series: Routledge research in place, space and politics series: Routledge, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315673301-20.

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Afentoulis, Melissa N. "Unravelling Islanders’ Migration Stories." In Greek Islander Migration to Australia since the 1950s, 1–24. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-85661-8_1.

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Zavos, Alexandra. "Building Alliances: Greek and Migrant Women in the Anti-racist Movement in Athens." In Feminism and Migration, 227–42. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-2831-8_12.

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Demetriou, Madeleine. "Priming the Diaspora: Cyprus and the Overseas Greek Cypriots." In International Migration and Sending Countries, 185–205. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230512429_9.

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Anthias, Floya. "The migration and settlement of Greek-Cypriots in Britain." In Ethnicity, Class, Gender and Migration, 1–9. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003296997-1.

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Moutselos, Michalis, and Georgia Mavrodi. "Diaspora Policies, Consular Services and Social Protection for Greek Citizens Abroad." In IMISCOE Research Series, 227–43. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-51245-3_13.

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Abstract The policies of the Greek state vis-à-vis Greek citizens residing abroad are better developed in some areas (pension, cultural/education policy), but very embryonic in others (social protection, family-related benefits). The institutions representing and aggregating the interests of the Greek diaspora, such as the General Secretariat for Greeks Abroad and the World Council of Hellenes abroad of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, reflect earlier periods of Greek migration during the post-war period, but meet less adequately the needs of recent migrants, especially following the post-2010 Greek economic crisis. At the same time, political parties continue to play an active role in the relationship between diaspora and the homeland. The policies of the Greek state, especially when exercised informally or with regard to cultural and educational programs, are also characterized by an emphasis on blood, language and religious ties, and are offshoots of a long-standing history of migration to Western Europe, North America and Australia. Possible developments, such as the long-overdue implementation of the right to vote from abroad, an official registrar for Greek citizens residing abroad, new programs of social protection in Greece and new economic incentives for return might change the diaspora policies of the Greek state in the next decades.
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Anthias, Floya. "Contextualising Greek-Cypriots in economic and ethnic relations in Cyprus." In Ethnicity, Class, Gender and Migration, 33–50. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003296997-3.

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Chatzidaki, Aspasia. "Greek State Schools in Germany and the Impact of ‘New’ Migration." In IMISCOE Research Series, 69–87. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-11574-5_4.

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AbstractThis chapter reports on a qualitative study investigating a particular type of Greek-language education abroad, namely non-mixed or Greek state schools in Germany, and the impact ‘new’ migration has had on their operation. These schools (K-12) follow the Greek curricula and employ teachers seconded from the Greek Ministry of Education. They were originally set up in the 1970s as an educational setting which would help immigrant students in Germany to develop Greek language skills and a Greek ethnocultural identity, eventually facilitating transition in the case of repatriation. Their graduates have the additional benefit of gaining access to Greek universities with relatively low grades, and, as a result, such schools have been a popular option for Greek immigrant families for the last forty years. Following the decision of Greek authorities to start abolishing them in 2011, Greek non-mixed schools saw their students’ numbers wane. ‘New’ migration to Germany (post 2010), however, has led to an important rise in enrolments and a change in the student population profile. According to the findings of a small-scale exploratory study presented in this chapter, teachers in these schools perceive new arrivals as young people traumatised by the migration experience and in need of a familiar physical and symbolic setting. As a result, non-mixed schools are once again considered as important institutions in the current circumstances on the grounds that they offer their students a number of advantages.
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Fakiolas, Rossetos. "Migration and Unregistered Labour in the Greek Economy." In Eldorado or Fortress? Migration in Southern Europe, 57–78. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780333982525_3.

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Conference papers on the topic "Greek migration"

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Maziku, Hellen, and Sachin Shetty. "Network Aware VM Migration in Cloud Data Centers." In 2014 Third GENI Research and Educational Experiment Workshop (GREE). IEEE, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/gree.2014.18.

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Rodriguez, Esteban, Gustavo Alkmim, Daniel M. Batista, and Nelson L. S. da Fonseca. "Live migration in green virtualized networks." In ICC 2013 - 2013 IEEE International Conference on Communications. IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icc.2013.6654865.

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Sun, Xiang, Nirwan Ansari, and Qiang Fan. "Green Energy Aware Avatar Migration Strategy in Green Cloudlet Networks." In 2015 IEEE 7th International Conference on Cloud Computing Technology and Science (CloudCom). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cloudcom.2015.23.

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Sharma, Riya, Anju Bala, and Ashima Singh. "Virtual Machine Migration for Green Cloud Computing." In 2022 IEEE International Conference on Distributed Computing and Electrical Circuits and Electronics (ICDCECE). IEEE, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icdcece53908.2022.9793067.

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Spinelli, Francesco, and Vincenzo Mancuso. "A Migration Path Toward Green Edge Gaming." In 2022 IEEE 23rd International Symposium on a World of Wireless, Mobile and Multimedia Networks (WoWMoM). IEEE, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/wowmom54355.2022.00033.

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Aikema, David, Andrey Mirtchovski, Cameron Kiddle, and Rob Simmonds. "Green cloud VM migration: Power use analysis." In 2012 International Green Computing Conference (IGCC). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/igcc.2012.6322249.

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Zhang, Liu-Mei, Jian-Feng Ma, Di Lu, and Yi-Chuan Wang. "A virtual machine migration scheme toward Green Cloud." In 5th International Conference on Advanced Computer Control. Southampton, UK: WIT Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/icacc130221.

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Cheng, Long, Hongming Cai, and Lihong Jiang. "Research on Code Migration Framework for Mobile Computing." In 2012 International Conference on Cloud and Green Computing (CGC). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cgc.2012.55.

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Truyen, Eddy, Bert Lagaisse, Wouter Joosen, Arnout Hoebreckx, and Cédric De Dycker. "Flexible Migration in Blue-Green Deployments within a Fixed Cost." In Middleware '20: 21st International Middleware Conference. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3429885.3429963.

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Carroll, Raymond, Sasitharan Balasubramaniam, Dmitri Botvich, and William Donnelly. "Dynamic Optimization Solution for Green Service Migration in Data Centres." In ICC 2011 - 2011 IEEE International Conference on Communications. IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icc.2011.5963030.

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Reports on the topic "Greek migration"

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Kerlinger, P. Assessment of the Impacts of Green Mountain Power Corporation's Wind Power Facility on Breeding and Migrating Birds in Searsburg, Vermont: July 1996--July 1998. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), March 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/15000381.

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Lundgren, Anna, and Ágúst Bogason. Re-start competence mobility in the Nordic Region. Nordregio, November 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.6027/wp2022:4.1403-2511.

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The Nordic Council of Ministers’ vision is for the Region to be the most sustainable and integrated region in the world by 2030. Cross-border labour market mobility in the Nordic Region will play an important role in achieving that goal. In this working paper, we share the latest data on labour market mobility across national borders in the Nordic Region in the form of both migration and commuting. We also present findings from a review of current literature on labour market mobility in the Nordic Region and present an analytical framework for exploring potential improvements to it. The working paper was written by Anna Lundgren, Senior Research Fellow and Ágúst Bogason, Research Fellow at Nordregio. A reference group comprising stakeholders from cross-border regions and Info Norden (see Appendix) provided input. The paper represents our contribution to research in this area and we invite others to comment on it. The project will present its final results in 2023. This working paper is part of the research project “Re-start Nordic competence mobility” under the thematic group of Green, resilient and innovative regions, which is part of the regional co-operation programme funded by the Nordic Council of Ministers. The first phase of the project resulted in a chapter, “Labour market mobility between the Nordic countries” in State of the Nordic Region 2022.
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