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      The Internationalization of Kinship and the Feminization of Caribbean Migration: The Case of Afro-Trinidadian Immigrants in Los Angeles

      Human Organization
      Society for Applied Anthropology

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          Birds of Passage are also Women...

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            The social process of international migration.

            The social process of network growth helps to explain the rapid increase in the migration of Mexicans to the United States during the 1970s. Migrant networks are webs of social ties that link potential migrants in sending communities to people in receiving societies, and their existence lowers the costs of international movement. With each person that becomes a migrant, the cost of migration is reduced for a set of friends and relatives, inducing them to migrate and further expanding the network. As a result of this dynamic interaction, network connections to the United States have become widespread throughout Mexico, and the probability of international migration from that country is high.
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              The Role of Households in International Migration and the Case of U.S.- Bound Migration from the Dominican Republic

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Human Organization
                Human Organization
                Society for Applied Anthropology
                0018-7259
                1938-3525
                March 1993
                March 1993
                : 52
                : 1
                : 32-40
                Article
                10.17730/humo.52.1.h424j806m023r464
                a6aa9b28-678a-4a58-a803-1e23494cbba6
                © 1993
                History

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