Here's another fun one: Tight immigration restrictions can *reduce* assimilation by increasing the rate of permanency among immigrants who previously might have been transient, inducing them to reproduce locally. https://t.co/fmLjn4FWL8
RT @m_clem: Are immigration restrictions the effect of limited integration, or a *cause* of limited integration? “Immigration restrictions…
RT @m_clem: Are immigration restrictions the effect of limited integration, or a *cause* of limited integration? “Immigration restrictions…
RT @m_clem: Are immigration restrictions the effect of limited integration, or a *cause* of limited integration? “Immigration restrictions…
RT @m_clem: Are immigration restrictions the effect of limited integration, or a *cause* of limited integration? “Immigration restrictions…
RT @m_clem: Are immigration restrictions the effect of limited integration, or a *cause* of limited integration? “Immigration restrictions…
Are immigration restrictions the effect of limited integration, or a *cause* of limited integration? “Immigration restrictions and second-generation cultural assimilation: theory and quasi-experimental evidence” https://t.co/gbQW6csWWR By Galli+Russo @Un
Back in 1973 (West) #Germany had an immigration restriction policy (#Anwerbestopp). A new study @JPopEcon shows such restrictive #immigration policies led to the unintended consequence of delaying the intergenerational process of cultural assimilation. ht
A latest thorough study of the 1973 #immigration ban in Germany (Anwerbestopp) concludes that restrictive immigration policies may have the unintended consequence of delaying the intergenerational process of cultural assimilation. https://t.co/8LNf7F7hcH v