What Emigration Leaves Behind: The Situation of Emigrants and Their Families in Ecuador

This study seeks to identify, measure and analyze possible discriminatory behaviors in southern Ecuador. There are three main findings. First, emigration is perceived as a social problem. Second, emigrant families are seen as economically "irrational" because they are not perceived to be investing remittances in productive and sustainable activities; emigrants are additionally portrayed as "irresponsible" because they leave their families in search of better living conditions. Third, emigrants' children are perceived as doing worse in school than their peers and as living outside the society at large. Observed discrimination follows a cultural pattern: persons closer to the dominant culture are proportionately more likely to discriminate against emigrants and their families, and women show more discriminatory attitudes than men.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Inter-American Development Bank
Other Authors: Ximena Soruco
Format: Working Papers biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Inter-American Development Bank
Subjects:Migration and Migrant, Emigration, immigration, social aspects of immigration, Ecuador, Latin American Research Network,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0011260
https://publications.iadb.org/en/what-emigration-leaves-behind-situation-emigrants-and-their-families-ecuador
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spelling dig-bid-node-107282024-05-30T20:25:17ZWhat Emigration Leaves Behind: The Situation of Emigrants and Their Families in Ecuador 2008-02-01T00:00:00+0000 http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0011260 https://publications.iadb.org/en/what-emigration-leaves-behind-situation-emigrants-and-their-families-ecuador Inter-American Development Bank Migration and Migrant Emigration, immigration, social aspects of immigration, Ecuador, Latin American Research Network This study seeks to identify, measure and analyze possible discriminatory behaviors in southern Ecuador. There are three main findings. First, emigration is perceived as a social problem. Second, emigrant families are seen as economically "irrational" because they are not perceived to be investing remittances in productive and sustainable activities; emigrants are additionally portrayed as "irresponsible" because they leave their families in search of better living conditions. Third, emigrants' children are perceived as doing worse in school than their peers and as living outside the society at large. Observed discrimination follows a cultural pattern: persons closer to the dominant culture are proportionately more likely to discriminate against emigrants and their families, and women show more discriminatory attitudes than men. Inter-American Development Bank Ximena Soruco Giorgina Piani Máximo Rossi Working Papers application/pdf IDB Publications Ecuador en
institution BID
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-bid
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca Felipe Herrera del BID
language English
topic Migration and Migrant
Emigration, immigration, social aspects of immigration, Ecuador, Latin American Research Network
Migration and Migrant
Emigration, immigration, social aspects of immigration, Ecuador, Latin American Research Network
spellingShingle Migration and Migrant
Emigration, immigration, social aspects of immigration, Ecuador, Latin American Research Network
Migration and Migrant
Emigration, immigration, social aspects of immigration, Ecuador, Latin American Research Network
Inter-American Development Bank
What Emigration Leaves Behind: The Situation of Emigrants and Their Families in Ecuador
description This study seeks to identify, measure and analyze possible discriminatory behaviors in southern Ecuador. There are three main findings. First, emigration is perceived as a social problem. Second, emigrant families are seen as economically "irrational" because they are not perceived to be investing remittances in productive and sustainable activities; emigrants are additionally portrayed as "irresponsible" because they leave their families in search of better living conditions. Third, emigrants' children are perceived as doing worse in school than their peers and as living outside the society at large. Observed discrimination follows a cultural pattern: persons closer to the dominant culture are proportionately more likely to discriminate against emigrants and their families, and women show more discriminatory attitudes than men.
author2 Ximena Soruco
author_facet Ximena Soruco
Inter-American Development Bank
format Working Papers
topic_facet Migration and Migrant
Emigration, immigration, social aspects of immigration, Ecuador, Latin American Research Network
author Inter-American Development Bank
author_sort Inter-American Development Bank
title What Emigration Leaves Behind: The Situation of Emigrants and Their Families in Ecuador
title_short What Emigration Leaves Behind: The Situation of Emigrants and Their Families in Ecuador
title_full What Emigration Leaves Behind: The Situation of Emigrants and Their Families in Ecuador
title_fullStr What Emigration Leaves Behind: The Situation of Emigrants and Their Families in Ecuador
title_full_unstemmed What Emigration Leaves Behind: The Situation of Emigrants and Their Families in Ecuador
title_sort what emigration leaves behind: the situation of emigrants and their families in ecuador
publisher Inter-American Development Bank
url http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0011260
https://publications.iadb.org/en/what-emigration-leaves-behind-situation-emigrants-and-their-families-ecuador
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