Literature DB >> 35495899

The Ethnosurvey Revisited: New Migrations, New Methodologies?

Pawel Kaczmarczyk1, Douglas S Massey2.   

Abstract

This article provides a detailed review of the ethnosurvey, a research methodology that has been widely applied to the study of migration for almost four decades. We focus on the application of ethnosurvey methods in Mexico and Poland, drawing on studies done in the former country since the early 1980s and in the latter since the early 1990s (including several post-2004 examples). The second case is particularly relevant for our analysis as it refers to a number of novel migration forms that have been identified in Central and Eastern Europe in the post-1989 transition period. Drawing these studies, we consider the advantages and disadvantages of the ethnosurvey as a research tool for studying international migration. Its advantages include its multilevel design, its blend of qualitative and quantitative methods, its reliance on retrospective life histories, and its multisite data collection strategy. These features yield a rich database that has enabled researchers to capture circular, irregular, short-term, and sequential movements. Its disadvantages primarily stem from its hybrid sampling strategy, which necessarily places limits on estimation and generalizability, and the technical challenges of parallel sampling in communities of both origin and destination. Here we argue that the ethnosurvey was never proposed and should not be taken as a universal methodology applicable in all circumstances. Rather it represents a specialized tool that when correctly applied under the right conditions can be extremely useful in revealing the social and economic mechanisms that underlie human mobility, thus yielding a fuller understanding of international migration's complex causes and diverse consequences in both sending and receiving societies.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Latin American Migration Project; Polish migration; ethnosurvey; migration research methodology

Year:  2019        PMID: 35495899      PMCID: PMC9053476          DOI: 10.17467/ceemr.2019.15

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cent East Eur Migr Rev        ISSN: 2300-1682


  24 in total

1.  The dynamics of mass migration.

Authors:  D S Massey; R M Zenteno
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1999-04-27       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  The new labor market: immigrants and wages after IRCA.

Authors:  J A Phillips; D S Massey
Journal:  Demography       Date:  1999-05

3.  The ethnosurvey in theory and practice.

Authors:  D S Massey
Journal:  Int Migr Rev       Date:  1987

4.  Pathways to legal immigration.

Authors:  Douglas S Massey; Nolan Malone
Journal:  Popul Res Policy Rev       Date:  2002

5.  STRUCTURAL ECONOMIC CHANGE AND INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION FROM MEXICO AND POLAND.

Authors:  Douglas S Massey; Frank Kalter; Karen A Pren
Journal:  Kolner Z Soz Sozpsychol       Date:  2008

6.  Processes of Internal and International Migration from Chitwan, Nepal.

Authors:  Pratikshya Bohra; Douglas S Massey
Journal:  Int Migr Rev       Date:  2009

7.  The Potential and Limitations of Cross-Context Comparative Research on Migration.

Authors:  Fernando Riosmena
Journal:  Ann Am Acad Pol Soc Sci       Date:  2016-06-14

8.  Why Border Enforcement Backfired.

Authors:  Douglas S Massey; Jorge Durand; Karen A Pren
Journal:  AJS       Date:  2016-03

9.  Undocumented Migration and the Wages of Mexican Immigrants.

Authors:  Douglas S Massey; Kerstin Gentsch
Journal:  Int Migr Rev       Date:  2014-03-07

10.  Unintended consequences of US immigration policy: explaining the post-1965 surge from Latin America.

Authors:  Douglas S Massey; Karen A Pren
Journal:  Popul Dev Rev       Date:  2012
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