Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
A. Saxenian (1994)
The New Argonauts: Regional Advantage in a Global Economy
A. Saxenian (2005)
From Brain Drain to Brain Circulation: Transnational Communities and Regional Upgrading in India and ChinaStudies in Comparative International Development, 40
F. Cerase (1974)
Expectations and Reality: A Case Study of Return Migration from the United States to Southern Italy *International Migration Review, 8
Lucie Cheng, Philip Yang (1998)
Global Interaction, Global Inequality, and Migration of the Highly Trained to the United States 1International Migration Review, 32
P. Jensen, Peder Pedersen (2007)
To Stay or Not to Stay? Out‐Migration of Immigrants from DenmarkInternational Migration, 45
Nadje Al-Ali, K. Koser (2001)
New Approaches to Migration?: Transnational Communities and the Transformation of Home
Sami Mahroum (2005)
The international policies of brain gain: A reviewTechnology Analysis & Strategic Management, 17
A. Kohli (2007)
State, Business, and Economic Growth in IndiaStudies in Comparative International Development, 42
C. Kadushin (2004)
Too Much Investment in Social Capital?Soc. Networks, 26
A. Portes (1998)
Social Capital: Its Origins and Applications in Modern SociologyReview of Sociology, 24
D. Kapur, R. Ramamurti (2001)
India's emerging competitive advantage in servicesIEEE Engineering Management Review, 30
C. Gu (2014)
Contextualizing Vocabularies of Motive in International Migration: The Case of Taiwanese in the United StatesInternational Migration, 52
N. Maron, J. Connell (2008)
Back to Nukunuku: Employment, identity and return migration in TongaAsia Pacific Viewpoint, 49
B. Khadria (2001)
Shifting Paradigms of Globalization: The Twenty‐first Century Transition Towards Generics in Skilled Migration from IndiaInternational Migration, 39
Thomas Faist (2000)
The Bridging Function of Social Capital: Transnational Social Spaces
Sami Mahroum (2000)
Highly Skilled Globetrotters: Mapping the International Migration of Human CapitalR & D Management, 30
M. White (2006)
Marguerite G. Lodico & Katherine H. Voegtle, Child and Adolescent Life Stories: Perspectives from Youth, Parents and Teachers Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications. 2005.Journal of Child and Family Studies, 15
A. Saxenian (2002)
Transnational Communities and the Evolution of Global Production Networks: The Cases of Taiwan, China and IndiaIndustry and Innovation, 9
Manashi Ray (2010)
Transcending national borders to embrace the beyond: A study of transnational Asian Indian entrepreneurs in the United States and India
M. Lamont, J. Schmalzbauer, Maureen Waller, D. Weber (1996)
Cultural and moral boundaries in the United States: Structural position, geographic location, and lifestyle explanations☆Poetics, 24
M. Poros (2001)
The role of migrant networks in linking local labour markets: the case of Asian Indian migration to New York and LondonGlobal Networks-a Journal of Transnational Affairs, 1
G. Elder, M. Johnson, Robert Crosnoe (2003)
The Emergence and Development of Life Course Theory
J. Meyer (2001)
Network Approach versus Brain Drain: Lessons from the DiasporaInternational Migration, 39
Sean Lauer, Q. Wong (2010)
Transnationalism over the Life CourseSociology Compass, 4
J. Ritchie, J. Lewis, C. Nicholls, R. Ormston (2013)
QUALITATIVE RESEARCH PRACTICE A GUIDE FOR SOCIAL SCIENCE STUDENTS AND RESEARCHERS
V. Francine, B. Treitler (2007)
Survival of the Knitted: Immigrant Social Networks in a Stratified World
Heike Alberts, Helen Hazen (2005)
“There are always two voices…”: International Students' Intentions to Stay in the United States or Return to their Home CountriesInternational Migration, 43
G. Elder (1998)
The life course as developmental theory.Child development, 69 1
William Harvey (2008)
Strong or Weak Ties? British and Indian Expatriate Scientists Finding Jobs in Boston
A. Saxenian, C. Sabel (2008)
Roepke Lecture in Economic Geography Venture Capital in the “Periphery”: The New Argonauts, Global Search, and Local Institution BuildingEconomic Geography, 84
Mira Kamdar (2007)
Planet India: How the Fastest Growing Democracy Is Transforming America and the World
[The phenomenon of return migration is ‘the great unwritten chapter in the history of migration’ (King, 2000: 7). Although migration to high-income OECD countries from poor developing nations has often been considered to be permanent up to now, in fact it has always had an element of impermanence, and more so at the present time because of the accelerating globalization of the world economy and the constant international migration of workers meeting the demands of emerging global markets. This means that migration in the present century often involves multiple migratory patterns, spread over a considerable period of time, that entail the flow of ideas, capital, attitudes and the skill sets of migrants themselves. As Faist (1997: 206) states, ‘leaving and returning may not be decisions taken only once [but] occur repeatedly over the life course of a mover’.]
Published: Nov 7, 2015
Keywords: Social Capital; Home Country; International Migration; Family Business; Comparative International Development
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.