Full-text resources of CEJSH and other databases are now available in the new Library of Science.
Visit https://bibliotekanauki.pl

PL EN


2023 | 12 | 2 | 99-115

Article title

‘For a Better Life’? The Role of Networks in Social (Im)Mobility after Return to Albania

Authors

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

Abstracts

EN
This article addresses the question of what influences the opportunities for social mobility in the context of return migration to Albania from a meso-level perspective. It applies a network-theory-based analysis to 104 qualitative interviews with a diverse sample of returned migrants, conducted in Albania between 2019 and 2022. The interviews are clustered into three categories according to the stated economic need for migration. The analysis shows that the geographical dispersion, the support capacities and the influence of these networks on migration decision-making differ significantly between the three categories. Despite some dynamics, individual network embeddedness reflects the overall socio-economic and ethno-political stratifications of the origin society and distinctively shapes migrants’ modalities and means of migration, the opportunities for resource accumulation abroad and their ability to re-establish themselves after return. Thus, social networks mainly contribute to continuity rather than change in terms of social stratification, even over the course of migration(s) and return(s). Yet, these effects are mediating, not determining, outcomes and are context-dependent. Lastly, network effects differ not only between but also within the categories, depending, for example, on the gender or age of the migrant.

Year

Volume

12

Issue

2

Pages

99-115

Physical description

Dates

published
2023

Contributors

author
  • Bonn International Centre for Conflict Studies (BICC), Germany

References

  • Ahmad A. (2015). ‘Since Many of My Friends Were Working in the Restaurant’: The Dual Role of Immigrants’ Social Networks in Occupational Attainment in the Finnish Labour Market. Journal of International Migration and Integration 16(4): 965–985.
  • Anthias F. (2008). Thinking Through the Lens of Translocational Positionality: An Intersectionality Frame for Understanding Identity and Belonging. Translocations: Migration and Social Change 4(1): 5–20.
  • Arqimandriti M., Llubani M., Ljarja A., Musiolek B., Luginbühl C. (2016). Country Profile Albania. https://cleanclothes.org/file-repository/livingwage-europe-country-profiles-albania/view (accessed 15 July 2022).
  • Barjaba J. (2018). Exploring Transnational Entrepreneurship Among Albanian Migrants and Returnees. Brighton: University of Sussex, unpublished PhD thesis.
  • Barjaba K. (2018). Failure of ‘Myth of Homeland’: Delay of Return Migration to Albania. Itinerari di Ricerca Storica 31(2): 219–225.
  • Barjaba K., Barjaba J. (2015). Embracing Emigration: The Migration–Development Nexus in Albania. Washington: Migration Policy Institute.
  • Betts A. (2013). Survival Migration. Failed Governance and the Crisis of Displacement. Ithaca NY: Cornell University Press.
  • Bertelsmann Stiftung (2022). BTI 2022 Country Report – Albania. https://bti-project.org/en/reports/country-report/ALB (accesed 15 July 2022).
  • Black R., King R. (2004). Migration, Return and Development in West Africa. Population, Space and Place 10(2): 75–83.
  • Burazeri G., Goda A., Sulo G., Stefa J., Kark J.D. (2008). Financial Loss in Pyramid Savings Schemes, Downward Social Mobility and Acute Coronary Syndrome in Transitional Albania. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health 62(7): 620–626.
  • Carletto C., Kilic T. (2011). Moving Up the Ladder? The Impact of Migration Experience on Occupational Mobility in Albania. Journal of Development Studies 47(6): 846–869.
  • Cassarino J.-P. (2004). Theorising Return Migration: The Conceptual Approach to Return Migrants Revisited. International Journal on Multicultural Societies 6(2): 253–279.
  • Cena E., Heim D. (2022). A Regretful Journey Home: Albanian Return Migration in the Wake of the Global Financial Crisis of 2008. Journal of International Migration and Integration 23(2): 499–518.
  • Central Intelligence Agency (2016). The World Factbook. New York: Skyhorse Publishing.
  • Collyer M. (2005). When Do Social Networks Fail to Explain Migration? Accounting for the Movement of Algerian Asylum-Seekers to the UK. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 31(4): 699–718.
  • Dabalen A., Miluka J. (2010). Who is Bearing the Burden? Exploring the Role of Albanian International Migration on Education. Eastern European Economics 48(6): 36–56.
  • De Haas H. (2010). The Internal Dynamics of Migration Processes: A Theoretical Inquiry. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 36(10): 1587–1617.
  • De Haas H. (2021). A Theory of Migration: The Aspirations-Capabilities Framework. Comparative Migration Studies 9(1): 8–43.
  • El-Mallakh N., Wahba J. (2021). Upward or Downward: Occupational Mobility and Return Migration. World Development 137: 105–203.
  • Epstein G.S., Hillman A.L. (1998). Herd Effects and Migration. London: Centre for Economic Policy Research, SSRN Scholarly Paper No. 106211.
  • Flahaux M. (2021). Reintegrating After Return: Conceptualisation and Empirical Evidence from the Life Course of Senegalese and Congolese Migrants. International Migration 59(2): 148–166.
  • Gammeltoft-Hansen T., Nyberg Sørensen N. (eds) (2013). The Migration Industry and the Commercialization of International Migration. London: Routledge.
  • Gëdeshi I., King R. (2020). Albanian Returned Asylum Seekers: Reintegration or Re-Emigration? Tirana: International Organization for Migration, Part 2 of National Household Migration Survey in Albania, pp. 49–110.
  • Gëdeshi I., King R. (2022). Albanian Returned Asylum-Seekers: Failures, Successes and What Can Be Achieved in a Short Time. Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies 24(3): 479–502.
  • Gemi E., Triandafyllidou A. (2021). Rethinking Migration and Return in Southeastern Europe: Albanian Mobilities To and From Italy and Greece. London: Routledge.
  • Germenji E., Milo L. (2009). Return and Labour Status at Home: Evidence from Returnees in Albania. Southeast European and Black Sea Studies 9(4): 497–517.
  • Gold S.J. (2001). Gender, Class, and Network: Social Structure and Migration Patterns among Transnational Israelis. Global Networks 1(1): 57–78.
  • Granovetter M.S. (1973). The Strength of Weak Ties. American Journal of Sociology 78(6): 1360–1380.
  • Grawert E., Mielke K. (2018). Coping with Protracted Displacement: How Afghans Secure their Livelihoods in Afghanistan, Iran and Pakistan. Bonn: Bonn International Centre for Conflict Studies, BICC Working Paper No. 2/18.
  • Hagan J.M., Wassink J.T. (2019). Return Migration and Social Mobility in Mexico. Current History 118(805): 50–55.
  • Hagan J.M., Wassink J. (2020). Return Migration Around the World: An Integrated Agenda for Future Research. Annual Review of Sociology 46: 533–552.
  • Hagan J., Wassink J., Castro B. (2019). A Longitudinal Analysis of Resource Mobilisation among Forced and Voluntary Return Migrants in Mexico. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 45(1): 170–189.
  • Hausmann R., Nedelkoska L. (2018). Welcome Home in a Crisis: Effects of Return Migration on the Non-Migrants’ Wages and Employment. European Economic Review 101: 101–132.
  • Kerpaçi K. (2019). Setting Up a Small Business in Albania: Return Migration and Entrepreneurship. Europa 21(37): 89–103.
  • Kerpaçi K., Kuka M. (2019). The Greek Debt Crisis and Albanian Return Migration. Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies 21(1): 104–119.
  • King R. (2005). Albania as a Laboratory for the Study of Migration and Development. Journal of Southern Europe and the Balkans 7(2): 133–155.
  • King R. (2022). Exploring the Return Migration and Development Nexus, in: R. King, K. Kuschminder (eds), Handbook of Return Migration, pp. 314–330. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.
  • King R., Gëdeshi I. (2020). New Trends in Potential Migration from Albania: The Migration Transition Postponed? Migration and Development 9(2): 131–151.
  • King R., Gëdeshi I. (2023). Albanian Students Abroad: A Putative Brain Drain. Central and Eastern European Migration Review, this issue.
  • King R., Kuschminder K. (2022). Introduction: Definitions, Typologies and Theories of Return Migration, in: R. King, K. Kuschminder (eds), Handbook of Return Migration, pp. 1–23. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.
  • King R., Piracha M., Vullnetari J. (2010). Migration and Development in Transition Economies of Southeastern Europe. Eastern European Economics 48(6): 3–16.
  • Kopliku Dema B., Drishti E. (2022). The (Big) Role of Family Constellations in Return Migration and Transnationalism. GLO Discussion Paper No. 1139. Essen: Global Labor Organization.
  • Kuschminder K. (2017). Reintegration Strategies: Conceptualizing How Return Migrants Reintegrate. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Leitner S.M. (2021). Net Migration and its Skill Composition in the Western Balkan Countries between 2010 and 2019: Results from a Cohort Approach Analysis. Vienna: Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies, Working Paper No. 179.
  • Lietaert I., Kuschminder K. (2021). Contextualizing and Conceptualizing Reintegration Processes in the Context of Return. International Migration 59(2): 140–147.
  • Lin N. (2001). Social Capital: A Theory of Social Structure and Action. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Massey D.S., Arango J., Hugo G., Kouaouci A., Pellegrino A., Taylor J.E. (1993). Theories of International Migration: A Review and Appraisal. Population and Development Review 19(3): 431–466.
  • Neidhöfer G., Ciaschi M., Gasparini L., Serrano J. (2021). Social Mobility and Economic Development. Discussion Paper No. 11-087, Mannheim: Leibniz Zentrum für Europäische Wirtschaftsforschung.
  • Nonchev A., Hristova M. (2021). Returning Bulgarian Migrants: Status Inequalities and Social-Economic Mobility. Nauchni Trudove 1: 313–336.
  • Olivier-Mensah C. (2019). ‘Be the Change’: Action Strategies and Implicit Knowledge in Transnational Return Migration, in: R.G. Anghel, M. Fauser, P. Boccagni (eds), Transnational Return and Social Change. Hierarchies, Identities and Ideas, pp. 123–140. London: Anthem Press.
  • Piracha M., Vadean F. (2010). Return Migration and Occupational Choice: Evidence from Albania. World Development 38(8): 1141–1155.
  • Portes A. (1998). Social Capital: Its Origins and Applications in Modern Sociology. Annual Review of Sociology 24: 1–24.
  • Putnam R. (2000). Bowling Alone. Collapse and Revival of American Community. New York: Simon & Schuster.
  • Ruben R., van Houte M., Davids T. (2009). What Determines the Embeddedness of Forced-Return Migrants? Rethinking the Role of Pre- and Post-Return Assistance. International Migration Review 43(4): 908–937.
  • Ryan L. (2011). Migrants’ Social Networks and Weak Ties: Accessing Resources and Constructing Relationships Post-Migration. The Sociological Review 59(4): 707–724.
  • Schapendonk J. (2015). What If Networks Move? Dynamic Social Networking in the Context of African Migration to Europe. Population, Space and Place 21(8): 809–819.
  • Sha H. (2021). Migrant Networks as Social Capital: The Social Infrastructure of Migration. Coventry: University of Coventry, MIDEQ Working Paper.
  • Stampini M., Carletto C., Davis B. (2014). International Migration from Albania: The Role of Family Networks and Previous Experience. Eastern European Economics 46(2): 50–87.
  • Vandenbelt K. (2020). A Call for a Unified Theoretical Approach to the Study of Migration: Network Analysis of International Migration Systems. Uluslararası İlişkiler/International Relations 17(68): 129–143.
  • Van Hear, N. (2014). Reconsidering Migration and Class. International Migration Review 48(S1): 100–121.
  • Van Houte M., Siegel M., Davids T. (2015). Return to Afghanistan: Migration as Reinforcement of Socio-Economic Stratification. Population, Space and Place 21(8): 692–703.
  • Van Meeteren M., Pereira S. (2018). Beyond the ‘Migrant Network’? Exploring Assistance Received in the Migration of Brazilians to Portugal and the Netherlands. Journal of International Migration and Integration 19(4): 925–944.
  • Vullnetari J. (2013). Albania on the Move. Links Between Internal and International Migration. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.
  • WEF (2020). The Global Social Mobility Report 2020. Equality, Opportunity and a New Economic Imperative. Geneva: World Economic Forum.
  • Zenelaga B., Kerpaçi K., Kseanela S. (2013). The Immigrant Self-Perception, Social Status and Myths Influence. A Comparison Study of the Albanian Immigrant in Greece and Italy, in: F. Tsibiridou, N. Palantzas (eds), Myths of the Other in the Balkans. Representations, Social Practices, Performances, pp. 221–223. Thessaloniki: Paris Aslanidis.
  • Zickel R., Iwaskiw W. (1994). Albania. A Country Case Study. Washington DC: GPO for the Library of Congress.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

Biblioteka Nauki
48802634

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.ojs-doi-10_54667_ceemr_2023_06
JavaScript is turned off in your web browser. Turn it on to take full advantage of this site, then refresh the page.