Activity 8
Activity 8
Activity 8
CONTEMPORARY WORLD
BSA 201
MODULAR ACTIVITY 8
GLOBAL MIGRATION
ACTIVITY 8.1
Effects on the economic Migration is currently a very hot topic in both the US
lifestyle of the Migrants and the EU. Immigration issues have come to the
migrated in the states. forefront due to the problem of rapidly ageing
populations, the refugee crisis, and growing
anti-immigration political rhetoric.
ACTIVITY 8.2
Remittances have been in existence for a very long time. Although in these
current years, remittances have become an enormous phenomenon in international
financial transfer. Remittances are becoming a key source of funding for many
projects in developing countries. Surveys show that remittances are the second largest
financial in flow that developing countries receive.
One in every fifty human beings more than 150 million persons live and outside
their countries of origin as migrants or refugees. They are highly vulnerable to racism,
xenophobia and discrimination. The extent and severity of these phenomena are
becoming increasingly evident in the reports of mistreatment and discrimination
against migrants, refugees and other nonnationals, which are emerging from every
region in the world. The fact that an increasing proportion of international migration
today is irregular and un authorised, facilitates abuse and exploitation. But, even when
their movements are legal and authorised, non-citizens face high levels of
discrimination. The challenge before us is to work together towards a world of respect
- respect for diversity. We must act to shape a world in which all human beings can
live in safety and dignity, and enjoy access to decent work and living conditions.
ACTIVITY 8.3
1.The students will be graded using the analytic rubric (see the appendices)
Migrants bring diversity. In other words, different cultures come together and
interaction occurs. Research shows that diversity is what people appreciate the most
in cities. On the one hand it makes citizens aware that they are part of something
bigger, a world behind the city borders. On the other hand, diversity brings the world
a bit closer, due to new cultural experiences in terms of food, language and symbols.
Next to the fact that it might be socially appreciated, there is evidence that,
economically speaking, cultural diversity is beneficial. Research shows that locals
who live in American cities that score higher on cultural diversity earn a higher wage
and are financially better-off than locals who don’t live in such cities.Migrants
maintain transnational connections. In a world that is getting more competitive, cities
benefit when its resources come from all over the world. Migrants connect the globe
and use their transnational social network to strengthen their local socioeconomic
activities. One can imagine, if a city caters these transnational connections and
eventually becomes a hub in the transnational migrants’ social web, then it will
certainly take a lead on the transnational ladder of competitiveness.
Remittances have been in existence for a very long time. Although in these current
years, remittances have become an enormous phenomenon in international financial
transfer. Remittances are becoming a key source of funding for many projects in
developing countries. Surveys show that remittances are the second largest financial
in flow that developing countries receive.
Integration cuts across different policies and various aspects of migrants’ lives and
therefore data on migrant integration cover a wide range of information, including
whether migrants are integrating into the economic, social, cultural, and political
spheres of society, the discrimination they face, how policies affect migrants’
inclusion, and how the public perceives migrants and immigration.
The process by which migrants become accepted into society, both as individuals and
as groups….[Integration] refers to a two-way process of adaptation by migrants and
host societies…[and implies] consideration of the rights and obligations of migrants
and host societies, of access to different kinds of services and the labour market, and
of identification and respect for a core set of values that bind migrants and host
communities in a common purpose.
One in every fifty human beings more than 150 million persons live and outside
their countries of origin as migrants or refugees. They are highly vulnerable to racism,
xenophobia and discrimination. The extent and severity of these phenomena are
becoming increasingly evident in the reports of mistreatment and discrimination
against migrants, refugees and other nonnationals, which are emerging from every
region in the world. The fact that an increasing proportion of international migration
today is irregular and un authorised, facilitates abuse and exploitation. But, even when
their movements are legal and authorised, non-citizens face high levels of
discrimination. The challenge before us is to work together towards a world of respect
- respect for diversity. We must act to shape a world in which all human beings can
live in safety and dignity, and enjoy access to decent work and living conditions.