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1

Lee Sang-Gab. "The World of Again-emigration and Re-emigration and Korean Argentino." EOMUNYEONGU 61, no. ll (September 2009): 507–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.17297/rsll.2009.61..020.

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2

Maruta, N., and O. Venger. "Peculiarities of depressive disorders of “working” emigrants and re-emigrants." European Psychiatry 41, S1 (April 2017): S533. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2017.01.727.

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IntroductionThe problem of emigration and re-emigration in Ukraine is among the most actual state and social problems.ObjectivesTo research clinical-psychopathological peculiarities of depressions in “working” emigrants and re-emigrants.MethodologyThe investigation was carried out in Ternopil Region. Psychogenic depressive disorders (F43.21 and F43.22 according to ICD-10) were diagnosed in 69 non-emigrants, 68 emigrants, and 67 re-emigrants; endogenous ones (F31.3, F31.4, F32.1, F32.2, F33.1, and F33.2 according to ICD-10) were diagnosed in 65, 66, and 63 persons correspondingly; and organic ones (F06.3 according to ICD-10) were diagnosed in 64, 62, and 61 persons correspondingly.ResultsIt was found out an influence of emigration and re-emigration factors on psychoemotional sphere of the patients. The influence of the emigration factor was the most manifested in patients with psychogenic depressive disorders and was a less manifested in patients with endogenous and organic depression. Re-emigrants had the most severe depressive symptoms that might be explained by an impact of psychosocial factors. In the syndromological structure of depressive disorders it was determined that re-emigrants were more affected by typical affective syndromes – vital and apathic depression, whereas emigrants were more affected by atypical affective syndromes, including anxious-depressive and agitation ones. It might be explained by an influence of objective social-psychological factors as well as an intrapsychic transformation of actual stressors connected with emigration and re-emigration.ConclusionsEmigration should be considered as a factor promoting a pathologically characterological development towards anxious-depressive changes, whereas re-emigration should be considered as a factor of asthenic-depressive and apathic-depressive transformations.Disclosure of interestThe authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.
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3

Whitehead, Hal. "Mark-Recapture Estimates with Emigration and Re-Immigration." Biometrics 46, no. 2 (June 1990): 473. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2531451.

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4

Namoniuk, Ch. "RE-EMIGRATION TO UKRAINE: FOREIGN POLICY PROSPECTS AND IMPLICATIONS." Actual Problems of International Relations, no. 137 (2018): 25–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/apmv.2018.137.0.25-32.

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The article reveals the main foreign policy problems of Ukraine in the connection with the growth of the population emigration activity. It allocates the most mobile categories of citizens who are most likely to emigrate. The paper names the main causes of emigration in terms of extortion and attraction factors for Ukrainians. It explains the difference between the consequences and the threats from short-term (seasonal) and long-term, as well as educational migration, with the subsequent change of the residence country forever. The study suggests a number of measures to accelerate the return of Ukrainian emigrants to their homeland and their reintegration in the framework of the adopted state migration strategy by means of developing effective motivational programs for the high-educated Ukrainian citizens who have traveled abroad to gain important professional experience in the political and social-economic state-building processes in highly developed countries. The investigation projects the further growth of Ukrainian population migration sentiment in case the negative tendencies of reforms immitating in the most important spheres are preserved and the general population impoverishment on the backdrop of exhausting protracted military aggression of the Russian Federation against Ukraine takes place. The article reveals positive effects of return migration to Ukraine from the state development humanitarian investments and Ukraine’s international political situation improvement point of view.
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Pereira, Sonia. "Immigrant workers’ (im)mobilities and their re‐emigration strategies." Employee Relations 34, no. 6 (September 28, 2012): 642–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/01425451211267937.

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6

Kravchenko, Iryna. "EMIGRATION IN THE LIFE AND WORKS OF GUSTAW HERLING-GRUDZIŃSKI (based on the material of “Journal written at night”)." Polish Studies of Kyiv, no. 35 (2019): 475–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/psk.2019.35.475-480.

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This article analyzes the problem of emigration in the life and works of one of the most impor- tant representatives of Polish literary emigration of the twentieth century – Gustaw Herling-Grudziński. He was a Polish writer, journalist, essayist, World War II underground fighter and political dissident abroad during the communist system in Poland. The work of the writer called “Journal Written at Night” was the material for this re- search. “Journal Written at Night” contains valuable information regarding his views on the problem of emigra- tion, and also describes the opinions of his Polish émigré colleges on this issue. In addition, the article describes the reason for the emigration of the writer and analyzes the works in which he described his emigration experience. Keywords: diary, emigrant, Polish literary emigration.
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Cuecuecha-Mendoza, Alfredo, Jaime Lara-Lara, and José Dionicio Vázquez-Vázquez. "La reemigración de niños estadunidenses que viven en México." Papeles de Población 23, no. 91 (March 31, 2017): 93–116. http://dx.doi.org/10.22185/24487147.2017.91.005.

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8

Sylburska, Aleksandra. "Repatriacja/reemigracja Polaków z Węgier po zakończeniu II wojny światowej." Prace Historyczne 148, no. 2 (2021): 411–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.4467/20844069ph.21.030.13867.

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The repatriation/re-emigration of Polish people from Hungary after World War II There were many Polish inhabitants in Hungary after the end of the World War II. They were economic emigrants who arrived at the end of the 19th century or refugees who crossed the Polish-Hungarian border in 1939. The goal of Polish representatives in Budapest (diplomats from July 1946) was to organize repatriation/re-emigration which would include both groups. The execution was not easy due to the problems with supplies, lack of money and difficulties to estimate the number of Polish people in Hungary. According to Polish government regime, repatriated people/re-emigrants were to help in rebuilding of the destroyed country, populating it, and developing Recovered Territories, whose status in the first post-war years had not been officially established yet.
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9

Koval, Olga V. "Legal and Social Aspects of the Belarusian Economic Emigration to Canada in the 1920s-30s." RUDN Journal of Russian History 21, no. 3 (August 31, 2022): 417–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.22363/2312-8674-2022-21-3-417-431.

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The author examines the main features for the formation of the Belarusian economic emigration to Canada. The intensity of the emigration from 1921 to 1939 was analyzed, when the territory of Western Belarus was a part of Poland. The historical base of the research was the unpublished documents of the Belarusian, Ukrainian and Polish archives. The article presents the structure of state emigration bodies that were involved in organizing and controlling the recruitment of emigrants, their employment and the process of re-emigration. It describes the features of the Canadian legislation for the scale of the Belarusian emigration and the legal adaptation of emigrants. Particular attention is paid to the role of the Canadian railway companies “Canadian National Railways” and “Canadian Pacific Railways” in the selection of emigrants and their employment in agriculture and industry. The author argue that the Polish authorities stimulated the emigration of the Belarusian population for the polonization of Western Belarus. The problematic socio-psychological adaptation of the Belarusian emigrants, because Belarusians in Canada weakly expressed the national identity, is described. The author concludes that the international cooperation had an important role in forming the diaspora’s and national identity, especially the international contacts with the representatives of other peoples and the participation in common political organizations and projects.
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10

Faria, Caroline, and Devon Hsiao. "Citizens in motion: emigration, immigration, and re-migration across China’s borders." Space and Polity 23, no. 3 (May 22, 2019): 319–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13562576.2019.1620098.

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Kerntopf, Martin. "Citizens in Motion Emigration, Immigration, and Re-migration Across China's Borders." Journal of Borderlands Studies 35, no. 5 (February 5, 2020): 831–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08865655.2020.1723126.

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12

Waters, Johanna L. "Citizens in motion: emigration, immigration, and re-migration across China’s borders." Social & Cultural Geography 21, no. 3 (October 19, 2019): 444–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14649365.2019.1681687.

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13

Gamlen, Alan. "Creating and destroying diaspora strategies: New Zealand’s emigration policies re-examined." Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 38, no. 2 (April 27, 2012): 238–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-5661.2012.00522.x.

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14

Muktupāvela, Rūta, and Janīna Kursīte. "THE CONCEPT OF “ MY FATHER ’ S HOME ” AS AN ANCHOR FOR LATVIAN “ SOLID IDENTITY ” CONSTRUCTIONS IN THE ERA OF “ LIQUID MODERNITY ”." Culture Crossroads 19 (October 11, 2022): 27–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.55877/cc.vol19.33.

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Liquid modernity is a concept proposed by Zygmunt Bauman that denotes modern tendencies in the development of the global capitalism economy. One of the main processes characterizing liquid modernity is human mobility, which in its turn results in a fragmented and indefinite identity and in the marginalization of local belonging. Mobility, especially in the form of long-term emigration, has become one of the major demographic problems Latvia has experienced. To provide solutions to the problems caused by emigration, in 2013 the Government of Latvia adopted an action plan to support re-emigration. The main idea of the plan refers basically to economic aspects. Obviously, it is not only economic factors that stimulate expatriates to return back home; psychological, emotional and symbolic aspects are no less significant. One of the most powerful symbols of re-emigration is home. The concept of home occupies one of the most important places in the process of self- categorization. It helps to organize self-knowledge and to recognize one’s own place in the surrounding environment (spatial and social, as well as mental) of emotions and memories. What is home in the era of liquid modernity? The observations made during the fieldworks in Riga, Valka and in the Svētupe region (2013–2016) showed that home is one of the most stable concepts in the construction of Latvian identity and the concept “my father’s home” still exists in Latvian worldview as a mytheme and as a symbolic equivalent of the beginning, of harmonic existence and “source of happiness and strength”.
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15

Bil, Mariana, Oleksandr Makhoniuk, and Nazariy Popadynets. "Concept of Regulating youth Migration Mobility of Ukraine in War Conditions." Journal of Vasyl Stefanyk Precarpathian National University 9, no. 3 (October 31, 2022): 44–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.15330/jpnu.9.3.44-54.

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Problematic aspects of the synergy of youth and migration policy, which acquire additional relevance for Ukraine in the war conditions, in the article were considered. The aim of the article is the scientific substantiation of the conceptual provisions regarding the regulation of youth migration mobility with the detection of modern priorities for Ukraine. The analysis of the legislation of Ukraine in the social sphere made it possible to reveal the importance of the issue of state support for youth among the conceptual-strategic and program-target priorities. At a time when developed countries are actively promoting the idea of «Talent on the Move», youth migration in Ukraine is taking on threatening characteristics due to the lack of systematic regulation of it. The results of a sociological survey of young people with migration experience, based on the example of the Lviv region of Ukraine, proved that youth re-emigration intentions were extremely low even before the Russo-Ukrainian War 2022. The emigration of Ukrainian youth is intellectualizing, changing the previous migration labor wave. The current wave of forced emigration also has the face of children and youth, who are highly likely to successfully integrate into host societies. Taking into account the risks of irreversible demographic losses and the social functionality of the state, it is necessary to implement a new concept of regulating the youth migration mobility, which includes measures to influence migration movements and migration potential, as well as support for the main areas of youth life. The new concept should be developed in accordance with the regulated priorities of national security, human and sustainable development, the expediency of youth policy regionalization in the conditions of a successful decentralization reform. The basis of the migration potential regulation is the organization of migration mobility monitoring in the context of the development and capitalization of human potential, that is, the clarification of the consequences of migration for the person and the region (state) of origin. It is mandatory to support of social ties with diaspora institutions. The new concept of regulating the youth migration mobility should aim to stimulate their re-emigration with a promising transition to ensuring circular migration during the post-war recovery period of Ukraine. The obtained results are the basis for further research in the part of determining the mechanisms of stimulating the re-emigration of young people to Ukraine and attracting their potential during further stay abroad.
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16

Kim, Young-Chul. "A Study on Re-Emigration and Settlement of Argentine Korean 1.5 Generations." Journal of Koreanology 60 (August 31, 2016): 83. http://dx.doi.org/10.15299/jk.2016.8.60.83.

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17

Gueye, Marame. "Fatou Diome’s Le ventre de l’Atlantique: re-configuring local discourses of emigration." Journal of the African Literature Association 14, no. 3 (April 20, 2020): 472–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21674736.2020.1750135.

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18

Clealand, Danielle Pilar. "Deciding on the Future: Race, Emigration and the New Economy in Cuba." Journal of Latin American Studies 52, no. 2 (April 14, 2020): 399–422. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022216x20000309.

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AbstractCuban emigration in the post-Soviet period has largely been attributed to economic motivations, but without significant racial analysis. Moreover, little is known about how black Cubans on the island think about emigration. It is therefore imperative to re-examine how blacks, once cited as the Cuban Revolution's loyalists, make decisions today about remaining in Cuba and/or pursuing economic security outside of its borders. Using original survey data of black Cubans on the island, I find that economic motivations are prominent among black Cubans, but that these motivations can be multifaceted. In a study of black Cubans and emigration, the issue of increasing racial inequality and racial exclusion has significant influence on economic opportunity, which in turn influences the desire to leave Cuba to achieve economic and professional success. The results have implications for the ways in which we analyse migration throughout the Latin American region, where race has not been factored into why people migrate.
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19

Argudyayeva, Yulia V. "RUSSIAN OLD BELIEVERS FROM SOUTH AMERICA TO PRIMORSKY KRAI: RE-EMIGRATION AND ADAPTATION." Study of Religion, no. 4 (2018): 62–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.22250/2072-8662.2018.4.62-67.

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20

Ablazhey, N. N. "RE-EMIGRATION PROGRAMME OF THE USSR IN THE SECOND HALF OF THE 1940s." Вестник Пермского университета. История, no. 3 (2018): 116–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.17072/2219-3111-2018-3-116-124.

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21

Chan, Yuk Wah. "Book review: Citizens in Motion: Emigration, Immigration, and Re-Migration Across China’s Borders." China Information 33, no. 3 (November 2019): 377–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0920203x19878364c.

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22

Weindling, Paul. "“Belsenitis”: Liberating Belsen, Its Hospitals, UNRRA, and Selection for Re-emigration, 1945–1948." Science in Context 19, no. 3 (September 2006): 401–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0269889706000998.

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ArgumentThe liberation of the concentration camp at Bergen-Belsen has remained controversial with opinion divided over whether the British military and subsequently the British zonal administration responded adequately to the plight of survivors. This paper reconsiders the evidence on health conditions at Bergen-Belsen. At first the British underestimated the incidence of typhus and the delay in taking effective measures caused the death rate to remain high. In the longer term, measures for psychotic, old, and infirm DPs were inadequate as criteria that favored the fit and able-bodied were applied when selecting migrants.
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23

Kijonka, Justyna, and Monika Żak. "Polish return migrants. Analysis of selected decision-making processes." Studia Migracyjne – Przegląd Polonijny 46, no. 4 (178) (2020): 115–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.4467/25444972smpp.20.041.12778.

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The scale and size of post-accession migration of Poles, especially to the British Isles, was surprising not only for the Polish side. The countries that opened their labour markets for the citizens of the new member states also failed to predict such a massive inflow of Polish nationals. Returning to the home country, however, does not get as much media attention as emigrating. This type of migration was not the subject of such heated discussions and analyses as emigration. The objective of the article is to sociologically describe the re-emigrants and answer questions concerning the motives for emigrating and returning, as well as how the emigration decision is assessed in retrospect. The paper is based on in-depth interviews conducted with individuals who had emigrated from Poland following the enlargement of the European Union and decided to return to their home country after a few years. Importantly, in order to detect readaptation problems, the respondents were selected from amongst those remigrants who had already been living in Poland for one to three years. The article shall present the results of these studies and the classifications of emigration, returns and remigrants.
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Kijonka, Justyna, and Monika Żak. "Polish return migrants. Analysis of selected decision-making processes." Studia Migracyjne – Przegląd Polonijny 46, no. 4 (178) (2020): 115–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.4467/25444972smpp.20.041.12778.

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The scale and size of post-accession migration of Poles, especially to the British Isles, was surprising not only for the Polish side. The countries that opened their labour markets for the citizens of the new member states also failed to predict such a massive inflow of Polish nationals. Returning to the home country, however, does not get as much media attention as emigrating. This type of migration was not the subject of such heated discussions and analyses as emigration. The objective of the article is to sociologically describe the re-emigrants and answer questions concerning the motives for emigrating and returning, as well as how the emigration decision is assessed in retrospect. The paper is based on in-depth interviews conducted with individuals who had emigrated from Poland following the enlargement of the European Union and decided to return to their home country after a few years. Importantly, in order to detect readaptation problems, the respondents were selected from amongst those remigrants who had already been living in Poland for one to three years. The article shall present the results of these studies and the classifications of emigration, returns and remigrants.
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Rybakovsky, Leonid, and Natalia Kozhevnikova. "Еmigration processes from Russia: directions, scale, ethnic structure." Population 22, no. 1 (May 8, 2019): 40–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.19181/1561-7785-2019-00003.

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After the collapse of the Soviet Union the structure of migration processes in Russia radically changed, a significant part of the internal migrations transformed into international ones. Although the scale of internal migrations noticeably decreased, still they continued to exceed international by several times. Along with the re-emigration of Russians and the immigration of people of other nationalities to Russia from the countries of the new abroad, which assumed a mass character, the international emigration from Russia to the countries of the old abroad increased significantly. This international migration flow has become permanent in the post-Soviet period. Analysis of statistical data made it possible to conclude that the scale of international migration, that substantially increased in the 1990s, in the zero years of the 21st century declined markedly. This applies both to immigration flows to Russia from the countries of the new abroad and to emigration flows from Russia to the countries of the old abroad. Despite the significant reduction in emigration from Russia in the twenty-first century, the main recipient countries for emigrants, as they were originally, are still Germany, Israel and the United States. The latter is due to the ethnic component. The article shows the extent to which international migrations damage Russia and improve labor (first of all, scientific and technical) and demographic potential of a number of recipient countries. It is emphasized that the solution of these problems is beyond the scope of state migration policy.
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Xhaho, Armela, and Erka Çaro. "Returning and Re-Emigrating Gendered Trajectories of (Re)Integration from Greece." European Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies 3, no. 1 (December 1, 2016): 171. http://dx.doi.org/10.26417/ejms.v3i1.p171-180.

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The aim of this research paper is three fold: (1) to shed some light on the struggles Albanian return migrants are facing in their psycho-social, cultural and labor market reintegration in the origin country, looking as well to the gendered trajectories of return and re-emigration(2) to highlight their gendered strategies in transferring back in their home country their financial, social and human capital;(3) to better understand the dynamic paths of their migration trajectories and finally (4) to push policy makers to put with high priority the returnees reintegration plan into the policy agenda. We base our analyze on 42 life stories of Albanian migrants, from which, 12 interviews with return migrants from Greece, 30 migrants that are actually in Greece (from which 50% have at least made an 1 attempt to return in Albania and 5 are circular migrants).The study found that: many Albanian migrants return to Albania to stay either temporary or permanently with the idea of investing in home country, though not all of them who return stay in Albania. Returnees and at a greater degree women, face lot struggles and difficulties in their psycho-social, cultural and economic reintegration upon their return, which make them mentally and psychologically vulnerable. Women experienced a sense of disempowerment, reconfiguration and re-traditionalisation of gender relationships upon their return. Labor market integration seem more problematic especially for returned women who faced a gendered gap in labor force participation . Moreover, despite migrant willingness to invest their financial and social remittances in Albania by bringing new ideas in the labor market trend, they experience a sense of disillusion. Therefore, having no support system back home, remaining jobless and in many cases failing in their investment endeavors, make returnees consider further re-emigration as a surviving strategy. This study suggest that it is time for policy makers to compile with high priority and with a gender lens analysis a new National Migration Strategy and Return Reintegration strategy, while developing concrete and coherent measures upon returnees successful reintegration in the home country. This policy research brings at the policy agenda an holistic and multidisciplinary approach to returnee reintegration through better multi- level/stakeholder collaboration and dialogue.
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Risna, R. R., and I. Ye Baraniak. "The Socio-Demographic Profile of the Lviv Region in Focus Labor Re-Emigration Prospects." Scientific Bulletin of UNFU 26, no. 6 (September 30, 2016): 126–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.15421/40260619.

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Taylor, Antony. "Chinese Emigration to Australia around 1900: A Re-examination of Australia’s ‘Great White Walls’." History Compass 11, no. 2 (January 24, 2013): 104–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hic3.12032.

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Gray, Breda. "‘Leaving Dublin’: Photographic portrayals of post-Celtic Tiger emigration – a sociological analysis." Sociological Review 67, no. 3 (October 2, 2018): 635–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0038026118795087.

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This article analyses David Monahan’s photographic portrait series of over 120 people before emigrating from post-Celtic Tiger Ireland, entitled ‘Leaving Dublin’. As a digital series that circulates across multiple media channels, it moves beyond the tradition of documentary photography into a more hybrid aesthetic, political and media environment. As well as inserting these images in multiple circulatory platforms and replicable formats, the series disrupts the dominant visual culture of emigration by expressively recasting how it is seen and thought. This article argues that the highly stylised and unsentimental aesthetic adopted by Monahan pushes the images beyond the established visual culture of sentimental departure, visualising instead transnational and multicultural histories and politics through complex circuits of migration. As such, it highlights what Mieke Bal sees as the instability of migratory culture in the city landscape. At the same time, however, it re-enacts particular social distinctions and divisions. Just as new trajectories, relationalites and stories ‘appear’ as constitutive of Dublin and contemporary mobility, so also other trajectories, relationalities and mobilities are disappeared in ways that keep an exclusionary topography and politics of mobility in place. This is evident in the insistent and persistent separation between Irish asylum-seeking/immigration and emigration-focused digital photographic projects. So, although digitisation facilitates reflexive ways of communicating contemporary migration, and Monahan’s project succeeds in forging subtle connections, it also re-enacts structured disconnection and forgetting.
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Kuzhel, Liubov. "Emigration calendars and almanacs of the 1930’s dedicated to the anniversaries of Ukrainian organizations." Proceedings of Vasyl Stefanyk National Scientific Library of Ukraine in Lviv, no. 14(30) (December 2022): 115–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.37222/2524-0315-2022-14(30)-5.

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Emigration almanacs and calendars dedicated to the anniversaries of Uk-rainian organizations were characterized by description of the history of the creation of an organization and its activities, as well as the inclusion of the chronicle of events, statistical information, rich illustrative material and little- known facts about the main public figures and their connection with Ukraine. The authors of the publications did not intend to make generalizations and draw significant conclusions. Their work resembles annals-chronicles, without conclusions and relevant references to sources. At the same time, this does not diminish the informative and scientific value of these publications, as they contain significant reference and archival materials, correspondence and re- collections of famous public figures. Thus, having reviewed the jubilee calendars and almanacs of Ukrainian emigration organizations and institutions, we can say that Ukrainian emigrants went through difficult historical challenges over a long period of time Uniting into socio-cultural, aid-providing, religious, and women’s organizations, emigrant did a lot of useful work and activities aimed at preserving national traditions and the Ukrainian language, popularizing Ukrainian literature, and defining self-identification. All this was carried out through campaigning in the press, speeches at rallies, pub- lication of relevant books, participation in strikes and demonstrations, and con- ducting cultural and educational work among Ukrainian youth. A characteris- tic feature of all calendars and almanacs of Ukrainian emigration in 1914–1939, including the jubilee ones, was that, regardless of religious affiliation and thematic orientation, they existed thanks to the enthusiasm of the publishers and editors themselves. They contain thorough factual material that can be used by researchers of the history of Ukrainian emigration in 1914–1939.
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Losheniuk, Oksana. "The concept of regulation of international labour migration in Ukraine." Herald of Ternopil National Economic University, no. 3(85) (August 8, 2017): 64–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.35774/visnyk2017.03.064.

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The article deals with challenges and opportunities for international labour migration in Ukraine. It is stressed that the approach to regulation of international labour migration should be comprehensive and should encompass a whole range of factors influencing migration flows, which will ensure making appropriate economic and social changes. The present concept of regulation of international labour migration in Ukraine is analyzed and the need for its improvement is discussed. The priority goals of the Concept of State Migration Policy in Ukraine are highlighted. It is stated that state migration policy is carried out in both emigration and immigration. Some of the key factors of immigration and emigration are identified. It is proved that migration policy in Ukraine is being shaped towards the European Union, which envisages a mutually beneficial redistribution of human resources over the countries. The paper claims, that achieving the quality of life as high as in the EU countries is a key demand for the integration into the European Union. It is emphasized that the existing legislation on migration has some weak points related to developing and fulfilling human potential of migrants. A range of measures to regulate international labour migration is introduced. Based on the research findings, the following actions are proposed to meet the aims of regulation of international labour migration in Ukraine: reduction of emigration from Ukraine by improving its socio-economic status; training and retraining of potential emigrants tailored to the specific characteristics of labor market growth in the country; stimulation of internal mobility aimed at the reduction of emigration; regulation of external employment of Ukrainian citizens; creation of conditions for attracting and efficient using of migrants’ money transfers; using transnational connections of migrants; halting the employment of national human resources; stimulation of immigration attractiveness for certain professional; halting illegal and undesirable migration; regulation of immigrants in Ukraine; legalization of illegal present immigrants; signing bilateral agreements between countries on return migration; stimulating re-emigration; protection of the rights and interests of labour migrants in Ukraine and abroad.
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Divita, David. "From Paris to Pueblo and Back: (Re-)Emigration and the Modernist Chronotope in Cultural Performance." Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 24, no. 1 (May 2014): 1–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jola.12034.

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郭, 美芬. "Elaine Lynn-Ee Ho, Citizens in Motion: Emigration, Immigration, and Re-migration Across China’s Borders." 华人研究国际学报 11, no. 02 (December 2019): 137–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s1793724819000269.

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RYNDZAK, Olha. "INHIBITION OF MIGRATION LOSSES OF THE HUMAN POTENTIAL OF UKRAINE." Economy of Ukraine 2019, no. 9-10 (October 24, 2019): 79–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.15407/economyukr.2019.09.079.

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Intensification of migration processes poses new challenges and tasks to the migration policy of Ukraine. One of the most acute problems at present is the mass emigration of the able-bodied population, especially highly educated youth, outside the country. The author’s concept of inhibition (slowing down) of human potential losses is proposed. It involves active migration policy measures in such directions: reduction of the emigration flows, stimulation of the external return migration and strengthening the internal migration of the population. At the same time, the ways of implementing each of these blocks are highlighted. Thus, it is possible to reduce the rate of emigration by regulating its factors. Two of these factors are analyzed: wages and unemployment. The author concludes it is necessary to gradually increase the level of wages, however, not mechanically but accompanied by a set of reforms. Regarding the problems of unemployment, a model of the mechanism for employment stimulation, involving a set of policy measures aimed at all subjects of the labor market, is developed. The stimulation of the external return migration, circular migration, re-immigration and repatriation involves: programs for encouraging and facilitating return and integration; financial, economic and organizational mechanisms for reciprocity provision; assistance in the employment of re-immigrants; pension settlement for circular migrants etc. To intensify internal migration (as a powerful alternative to external), it is necessary: to reduce administrative obstacles on the way of internal movements of the population; to create favorable conditions for realization the right to freedom of movement; to intensify interregional human exchange and cooperation; to develop measures for internal migration stimulation; to improve transport networks. Along with the socio-economic inhibitors, it is also necessary to apply mental factors, which can affect the migration behavior of the population. The author’s proposals, covered in the article, can become the basis for solving the problem of migration losses of human potential and for increasing the efficiency of the migration policy of Ukraine.
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Negra, Diane, Anthony P. McIntyre, and Eleanor O’Leary. "Broadcasting Irish emigration in an era of global mobility." European Journal of Cultural Studies 22, no. 5-6 (August 13, 2018): 849–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1367549418786408.

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This article examines how pre-existing Irish migratory cultural logics have been re-tooled in the post-Celtic Tiger period as a form of adaptation to the new imperatives of global capitalism. In this analysis, we show that just as Julien Mercille has discovered in regard to the Irish press and its role in normalizing and promoting neoliberal responses to the economic crisis, representations of the new emigration in the Irish broadcasting environment traverse a narrow spectrum that runs from optimism to resignation. Reality genres heavily tout the values of enterprise and resilience as well as the material affordances that are seen to accrue from emigration, while dramas are more customarily committed to the emotional management of experiences of loss and separation. Structural inquiry into national economic programmes and priorities is customarily excluded in such an environment, although it may be seen that more vernacular forms such as YouTube videos and a low-level but consistent preoccupation with the experiences and concerns of the returned migrant in the Irish press suggest public interest in unsettled questions about the permeability of Irish society and what it means to be located within or dislocated from it.
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Nešpor, Zdeněk R. "The Re-emigration of Czech Western Emigrants in the 1990s from the Perspective of Economic Sociology." Czech Sociological Review 41, no. 1 (February 1, 2005): 31–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.13060/00380288.2005.41.1.03.

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Koh, Sin Yee. "Citizens in Motion: Emigration, Immigration, and Re-Migration across China’s Borders, by Elaine Lynn-Ee Ho." Asian Journal of Social Science 47, no. 6 (December 12, 2019): 753–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15685314-04706008.

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Kwong, Ying-Ho. "After State Repression: Movement Abeyance in Hong Kong under the Enforcement of the National Security Law." Journal of Asian and African Studies 58, no. 1 (January 15, 2023): 68–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00219096221124940.

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The Chinese government has imposed the National Security Law which has resulted in Hong Kong formally entering into a phase of movement abeyance. By analysing 3377 posts on LIHKG Internet forum, this article re-explores the online protest attitude during this movement abeyance. The findings indicate that content creators are more attentive in regard to criticizing the legislation and pro-Beijing figures, followed by seeking international support and calling for unity. Users are more ‘participative’ in calling for mutual destruction between the authorities and people, initiating mutual support and seeking emigration. This study provides new perspectives on the study of movement abeyance.
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Isabel Pereira Esteves, Alina, Maria Lucinda Cruz dos Santos Fonseca, and Jorge da Silva Macaísta Malheiros. "Labour market integration of immigrants in Portugal in times of austerity: resilience,in situresponses and re-emigration." Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 44, no. 14 (August 30, 2017): 2375–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1369183x.2017.1346040.

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Abadan-Unat, Nermin. "East-West vs. South-North Migration: Effects upon the Recruitment Areas of the 1960s." International Migration Review 26, no. 2 (June 1992): 401–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/019791839202600213.

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The end of the Cold War has been marked by the re-emergence of nationalism. This article is focused on Turkey and Turkish emigration abroad. It examines integration of second generation immigrants in Western Europe and various forces fostering Islamic identity. It then compares political discourse on immigration in France and Germany. It concludes that the resurgence of ethnic identity as the basis for effective political action in widely divergent societies is a key feature of the post-Cold War period. Immigrants have been actively involved in this general process as witnessed by the role of immigrants in recent conflict in Yugoslavia and Turkey.
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David, Anda M. "Back to Square One: Socioeconomic Integration of Deported Migrants." International Migration Review 51, no. 1 (March 2017): 127–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imre.12208.

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This paper addresses the issue of socioeconomic integration of forced return migrants, focusing on the Maghreb countries. Starting from the hypothesis that the return has to be prepared, I tested whether a disruption in the migration cycle (such as deportation) increases the individual's vulnerability and affects his integration from both a structural and sociocultural point of view, using the 2006 Migration de Retour au Maghreb (MIREM, or Return Migration to the Maghreb) survey. I found that forced returnees are more vulnerable to negative labor market outcomes compared to voluntary returnees. The absence of forced returnees from the labor market, or their underperformances, creates a net loss for the origin country and also incentives to re-migrate. The negative effect is statistically significant not only immediately after return, but also in the long run, at survey time. Forced return is also significantly and negatively correlated with sociocultural integration, reflecting a marginalization of deported migrants in their home environment, which may act as a re-emigration incentive.
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MULSKA, Olha, and Ihor BARANYAK. "MIGRATION MOBILITY OF THE CARPATHIAN REGION YOUTH: PROPOSITION OF IMPROVEMENT OF INFORMATION -ANALYTIC SUPPORT OF REGIONAL MIGRATION POLICY." Economy of Ukraine 2021, no. 12 (December 14, 2021): 71–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.15407/economyukr.2021.12.071.

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The development of the new information-driven society along with the penetration of the globalization processes in all social and economic activities became the entities of the liberalization of the migration relations, which simplify in general the youth moving and increase its mobility. Based on statistics and administrative data analysis about youth migration from Carpathian Region it was determined that quick spreading of the positive migration aspirations among the youthful population gets new looms and can lead to the migration deprivation ramp-ups in the Carpathian Region in the future. Mainstreaming of the external migration climate and escalation of the problem are also heavily mandated by the entity of the passive state and regional migration policy, which manifests through immature system of the real complex migration registration, unfinished state of system of the institutional-organizational and institutional-legal regulation of the migration processes at the regional and local levels, low quality and low organizational and technical options of the migration services’ infrastructure elements, insufficient use of the resources of the migration exchange programs in the field of education, science, innovation and research activities, tourism, investment and business projects, the lack of regional programs of the stimulation of the educational and labor migrants’ re-emigration. In the attempt to eliminate gaps in migration policy and minimize the risks and threats of the growth of migration activity of the Carpathian Region youth, the instruments and methods of external migration monitoring system’s improvement, the development of the regional databases of migration structural-dynamic characteristics, the development of migration policy preventive instruments aimed to regulation of the regional labor markets, and the corresponding implementation of the migration services market infrastructure’s development, stimulation of the educational and labor migrants’ re-emigration, improvement of the migration policy institutional support in the Carpathian Region were proposed.
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Topilin, A. V. "The labor potential of Russia: demographic and socioeconomic problems of formation and usage." Вестник Российской академии наук 89, no. 7 (July 8, 2019): 736–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.31857/s0869-5873897736-744.

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The article clarifies the term "labor potential", considering modern scientific approaches. The peculiarities of the formation of labor potential are reflected in the conditions of the second wave of depopulation. The main directions of employment expansion due to the increase of labor activity of social and demographic population groups are considered. These groups include youth, invalids, and pensioners. The specificity of structural shifts in employment in comparison with developed Western countries is revealed. The role of re-emigration and external and internal labor migration in achieving a balance of demand and supply of labor is noted. Proposals on the main directions of the strategy of development and usage of labor potential are also given.
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Komorowska, Hanna. "Język a tożsamość. Język pierwszy, drugi i obcy a sukcesy i niepowodzenia szkolne." Neofilolog, no. 49/1 (September 15, 2017): 7–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.14746/n.2017.49.1.01.

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The article investigates relationships between national/ ethnic identity and languages used in the school context. The impact of imposed, attributed, regained and selected identities on first and second language proficiency is analyzed on numerous examples drawn from the areas of history, literature and culture. Approaches to bi-and monolingualism and bi and monoculturalism are then presented with special emphasis on the role of stereotypes. Linguistic factors which influence success and failure are discussed vis-à-vis immigration and re-emigration. Attention is given to difficulties encountered by students using restricted L1 codes as well as to problems faced by pupils lacking proficiency in the language of schooling. Implications are sought for language education in the school system.
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Maruta, N. O., O. P. Venger, T. V. Panko, and I. O. Yavdak. "Peculiarities of Depressive Disorders in Emigrants and Re-Emigrants." European Psychiatry 33, S1 (March 2016): S491. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2016.01.1806.

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IntroductionEmigration and remigration are one of the greatest modern problems and considered as a factor provoking manifestation and exacerbation of mental disorders as well as pathocharacterological personality changes. In emigrants and re-emigrants peculiarities of course of depressive disorders with different genesis are not investigated, that impedes a development of adequate therapeutic methods.AimTo study clinical-psychopathological peculiarities of depressive disorders in emigrants and re-emigrants patients with psychogenic (F43.21, F43.22) (69 non-emigrants, 68 emigrants, 67 re-emigrants), endogenous (F31.3, F31.4, F32.1, F32.2, F33.1, F33.2) (65, 66 and 63 patients, respectively) and organic depressive disorders (F06.3) (64, 62 and 61 patients, respectively) were examined.MethodsA clinical-psychopathological investigation, Standardized Personality Examination Method, Lusher's Method of Color Choices, HDRS, HARS, MADRS, and SCL-90-R.ResultsThe highest level of severity of depressive disorders in re-emigrants and the lowest level in non-emigrants were registered. Re-emigrants had predominantly depressive, asthenic-depressive and apathic-depressive forms, whereas emigrants had mainly anxious-depressive ones. According to SCL-90-R data, emigrants had higher indexes of somatization, obsessive-compulsive disorders, anxiety, whereas re-emigrants had higher indexes of depression and interpersonal sensitivity as well as an index of distress expression. In patients examined it was determined a predomination of dysthymic personality traits manifested in the frameworks of the leading depressive of anxious-depressive syndromes. An influence of emigration and remigration factors was the greatest in psychogenic depressions and the lowest in organic depressive disorders.ConclusionsThe abovementioned regularities should be taken into account in pharmacotherapy and a social-psychological support for such patients.Disclosure of interestThe authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.
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Liusyi A.P., Liusyi A. P., and Zhou Lu. "“Ladies and sorvants”: about two “Chinese texts” of Russian literature." Voprosy kul'turologii (Issues of Cultural Studies), no. 12 (October 7, 2021): 46–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.33920/nik-01-2012-05.

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After the Civil War, Harbin became the “capital” of the Russian emigration in China, the source of the salutary memory, which made it possible to revive Russian culture in the memory. The “Chinese mind” brought mythologemes of space and chaos into the poetry of the Far East abroad. Their interaction with the event plan of consciousness has created a set of stable motive-figurative and semantic dominants. The Harbin myth as a utopian myth about the re-creation of pre-revolutionary Russia in a Chinese city has become a semantic invariant of the first “Chinese text”. Second, the Soviet “Chinese text” is accompanied by a “drunken” discourse, a discourse of inspiration and obsession, presenting the Chinese revolution as a sacred process of cleansing from violence and colonialism.
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Calvillo Vázquez, Ana Luisa, and Guillermo Hernández Orozco. "Discurso y resistencia: la cultura de la deportación de los migrantes mexicanos." Migraciones internacionales 12 (January 30, 2021): 0. http://dx.doi.org/10.33679/rmi.v1i1.2129.

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It was sought to know the meaning of deportation for Mexicans who were returned from the United States in the last decade, based on their ideas, attitudes, and beliefs, from the educational approach and the analysis of content as a methodological strategy. Empirical material consisted of 25 digital narratives from the public archive “Humanizing Deportation,” six in-depth interviews conducted between 2016 and 2017 in Tijuana, Baja California, and five historical testimonies located in bibliographic sources. Findings show that post-deportation irregular re-emigration underlines a political behavior of resistance that suggests the existence of a culture of deportation, which differs from the culture of migration and the culture of clandestine border crossing, even though the current penalty for illegal reentry has inhibited or postponed these practices.
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Gerasimova, Victoria. "Bishop Methodian Campanian and the Practice of Pilgrimage to the Holy Land of the Russian Emigration: (Re)Invented Tradition." State Religion and Church in Russia and Worldwide 38, no. 4 (2020): 294–317. http://dx.doi.org/10.22394/2073-7203-2020-38-4-294-317.

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The paper deals with the Russian émigrés’ pilgrimage to the Holy Land after the Second World War. The author analyzes the phenomenon of the restoration of group pilgrimages as a process of reinventing the pilgrimage tradition first developed mainly in the peasant milieu at the turn of the twentieth century. The annual trips from France organized by Bishop Methodian Kulman served as the basis for the new pilgrimage movement and the formation of a new community of “co-pilgrims”, uniting Russian Orthodox emigrants from all over the world. Perceived as a romantic ideal, the old peasant pilgrimage to Palestine became a source of new meanings for pilgrims in the second half of the 20th century. The author explores the process of gradual ritualization and formalization of the trips; the reconstruction of the Russian mental map of the Holy Land; the use of the pilgrimage as a way to cope with longing for the lost homeland and seeking authenticity by reproducing institutions of the past. The pilgrimage, interpreted as a spiritual ideal, became one of the ways to consolidate the Russian emigration.
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SIROMSKYI, Ruslan. "The Freedom to Choose a Country of Residence: Re-emigration from Canada to the Ukrainian SSR (1955–1960-ies)." Наукові зошити історичного факультету Львівського університету / Proceedings of History Faculty of Lviv University, no. 23 (June 8, 2022): 93–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/fhi.2022.22-23.3598.

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The article examines the peculiarities of the Soviet policy of return-to-the-homeland campaign from Canada to the Ukrainian SSR, which since 1955 was conducted by the Committee for Repatriation to the Motherland. The Ukrainian Diaspora in Canada occupied a special place in the committee’s efforts. The propaganda campaign for re-emigration was aimed at forming a positive images of the Soviet Union / Ukrainian SSR, in particular their economic achievements. The emotional component that was used to stir up nostalgia among the Diaspora was also fully used. The Ukrainian pro-communist press published numerous letters by Ukrainians who had lived in Canada but returned to their native land as evidence of the wonderful life in Ukraine. The return-to-the-homeland campaign was helped by leftist Canadian organizations (such as Association of United Ukrainian Canadians) through their own newspapers. It regularly published letters to friends in Canada from recent returnees. The return-to-the-homeland campaign was conducted in the context of the Cold War and the difficult relationship between Canada and the Soviet Union. However, re-emigration from Canada did not become so massive, as hoped for by its organizers, and by its scale was inferior to reminiscences from other countries (for example, from Argentina). The hundreds of Canadians who resettled in the Soviet Union in the second half of the 1950s represented only a small part of the Ukrainian origin community in Canada. But even in this situation, the Canadian government’s position on the return-to-the-homeland campaign was clearly considered too passive by members of the Ukrainian Canadian Committee. Canadians who returned to the U.S.S.R. felt duped and were not easily integrated into Soviet life. Those who succumbed to the manipulation of Soviet propaganda were quickly disappointed with the realities of life in the Ukrainian SSR and began to appeal for a return. Such persons immediately fell within the sight of the Committee of State Security, whose staff conducted “preventive conversations” with them. From the Canadian government’s perspective, there were no problems for people who had been born in Canada and they were eligible for Canadian citizenship. From the Soviet point of view, such steps were equivalent to political betrayals and were completely prevented. Separate cases of successful returns to the ocean were fixed at the beginning of the 1970s, which became possible due to the detente of international tensions during the Cold War and more persistent actions by Canadian authorities. A small number of repatriates managed with considerable difficulty to return to Canada. Some of them (N. Demydenko, E. Lenko) have been seeking permission to go to Canada for several years.
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Cotler, Irwin. "Uyghurs in the Diaspora: Opening Address." Journal of the Council for Research on Religion 3, no. 1 (December 30, 2021): ii—vi. http://dx.doi.org/10.26443/jcreor.v3i1.61.

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Professor Irwin Cotler gave the opening address at the virtual symposium “The Uyghurs in the Diaspora” on May 31st, 2021. The objectives and aims of the conference were to present research findings from various groups regarding the situation of the Uyghur diaspora living in Canada. Given that the Uyghur identity has been heavily sanctioned by the Chinese government, leading several western governments – including Canada, the United States, and the United Kingdom – to declare the situation in Xinjiang, China to be a genocide, the overarching questions guiding the symposium were related to how diaspora communities have been re-claiming their Uyghur identity: How has the ongoing genocide affected the Uyghur community? How has emigration and living in the diaspora allowed the community to “reconnect” with their cultural and religious identity?
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