11 Facts About Chain migration

1.

Chain migration is the social process by which immigrants from a particular area follow others from that area to a particular destination.

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2.

Remittances contribute to chain migration by aiding in both funding and interest in migration.

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3.

Social networks for Chain migration are universal and not limited to specific nations, cultures, or crises.

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4.

Chain migration helped Italian men immigrate to such cities as New York in the United States and Buenos Aires in Argentina for work as migrant laborers.

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5.

However, after the passage in the United States of the ImChain migration Act of 1924, return Chain migration was limited and led more Italians to become naturalized citizens.

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6.

The networks that had been built up by information and money due to chain and return migration provided incentives for Italian permanent migration.

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7.

Italian chain migration was initially wholly male based on intent to return, but became a source of family reunification when wives eventually immigrated.

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8.

Chinese chain migration was almost exclusively male until 1946, when the War Brides Act allowed Chinese wives of American citizens to immigrate without regard to Chinese immigration quotas.

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9.

Additionally, once the chain of migration had begun from a farm town in Europe, the pamphlets along with letters and remittances sent from America made migration an accessible opportunity for more and more of the people of that community.

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10.

Chain migration had provided relatively easy access to migration for Mexicans that the immigration legislation of the 1980s to the present has attempted to deal with.

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11.

Advocates of imChain migration restriction believe the family reunification policy is too permissive, leads to higher than expected levels of imChain migration, and what they consider the wrong type of immigrants.

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