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Hillel Rapoport - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Reprint of: Migration and Development Research is Moving Far Beyond Remittances
    World Development, 2015
    Co-Authors: Michael A Clemens, Caglar Ozden, Hillel Rapoport
    Abstract:

    Research on migration and Development has recently changed, in two ways. First, it has grown sharply in volume, emerging as a proper subfield. Second, while it once embraced principally rural–urban migration and international remittances, migration and Development Research has broadened to consider a range of international Development processes. These include human capital investment, global diaspora networks, circular or temporary migration, and the transfer of technology and cultural norms. For this special issue, we present a selection of frontier migration-and-Development Research that instantiates these trends.

  • Migration and Development Research Is Moving Far beyond Remittances (2014)
    World Development, 2014
    Co-Authors: Michael A Clemens, Caglar Ozden, Hillel Rapoport
    Abstract:

    Research on migration and Development has recently changed, in two ways. First, it has grown sharply in volume, emerging as a proper subfield. Second, while it once embraced principally rural-urban migration and international remittances, migration and Development Research has broadened to consider a range of international Development processes. These include human capital investment, global diaspora networks, circular or temporary migration, and the transfer of technology and cultural norms. For this special issue, we present a selection of frontier migration-and-Development Research that instantiates these trends.

  • migration and Development Research is moving far beyond remittances
    World Development, 2014
    Co-Authors: Michael A Clemens, Caglar Ozden, Hillel Rapoport
    Abstract:

    Research on migration and Development has recently changed, in two ways. First, it has grown sharply in volume, emerging as a proper subfield. Second, while it once embraced principally rural-urban migration and international remittances, migration and Development Research has broadened to consider a range of international Development processes. These include human capital investment, global diaspora networks, circular or temporary migration, and the transfer of technology and cultural norms. For this special issue, we present a selection of frontier migration-and-Development Research that instantiates these trends.

Marc A. Rosen - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Advances in Sustainable Development Research
    European Journal of Sustainable Development Research, 2019
    Co-Authors: Marc A. Rosen
    Abstract:

    The UN Sustainable Development Goals provide a framework for developing plans and policies for sustainable Development, and have spurred an increase in Research and activity in this field. There is no single approach to sustainable Development, as approaches will vary from country to country, reflecting national and local needs and contexts. But care is needed in moving forward with the Sustainable Development Goals, if their benefits are to be realized. This issue of the European Journal of Sustainable Development Research marks its second anniversary, and demonstrates that the journal has already made a notable impact on the field of sustainable Development through having published Research on many recent advances.

  • One Year of Sustainable Development Research
    European Journal of Sustainable Development Research, 2018
    Co-Authors: Marc A. Rosen
    Abstract:

    This issue of the European Journal of Sustainable Development Research marks its first anniversary, and demonstrates that the journal has already made a notable impact on the field of sustainable Development through having published Research on many recent advances. The topics likely to be addressed in the future, and thus covered in the European Journal of Sustainable Development Research, are likely to revolve around the 17 Sustainable Development Goals of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

Michael A Clemens - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Reprint of: Migration and Development Research is Moving Far Beyond Remittances
    World Development, 2015
    Co-Authors: Michael A Clemens, Caglar Ozden, Hillel Rapoport
    Abstract:

    Research on migration and Development has recently changed, in two ways. First, it has grown sharply in volume, emerging as a proper subfield. Second, while it once embraced principally rural–urban migration and international remittances, migration and Development Research has broadened to consider a range of international Development processes. These include human capital investment, global diaspora networks, circular or temporary migration, and the transfer of technology and cultural norms. For this special issue, we present a selection of frontier migration-and-Development Research that instantiates these trends.

  • Migration and Development Research Is Moving Far beyond Remittances (2014)
    World Development, 2014
    Co-Authors: Michael A Clemens, Caglar Ozden, Hillel Rapoport
    Abstract:

    Research on migration and Development has recently changed, in two ways. First, it has grown sharply in volume, emerging as a proper subfield. Second, while it once embraced principally rural-urban migration and international remittances, migration and Development Research has broadened to consider a range of international Development processes. These include human capital investment, global diaspora networks, circular or temporary migration, and the transfer of technology and cultural norms. For this special issue, we present a selection of frontier migration-and-Development Research that instantiates these trends.

  • migration and Development Research is moving far beyond remittances
    World Development, 2014
    Co-Authors: Michael A Clemens, Caglar Ozden, Hillel Rapoport
    Abstract:

    Research on migration and Development has recently changed, in two ways. First, it has grown sharply in volume, emerging as a proper subfield. Second, while it once embraced principally rural-urban migration and international remittances, migration and Development Research has broadened to consider a range of international Development processes. These include human capital investment, global diaspora networks, circular or temporary migration, and the transfer of technology and cultural norms. For this special issue, we present a selection of frontier migration-and-Development Research that instantiates these trends.

Sarah White - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • A Space for Unlearning? A Relational Perspective on North–South Development Research
    The European Journal of Development Research, 2020
    Co-Authors: Sarah White
    Abstract:

    Abstract The politics of knowledge is a foundational issue in Development Research. This includes questioning the processes through which knowledge is produced and the terms of the ‘partnerships’ or ‘collaborations’ involved. Such analyses tend to emphasise structural difference and can reproduce all too familiar tropes of dominating global North and deficit global South. This paper takes instead a relational perspective to investigate how such notions are generated, sustained and may be contested through interactions between people, and between people and their contexts. For data, the paper draws on experiences and observations related in a 2018–2019 workshop series on international collaborations in Development Research. It argues the need to go beyond a focus on ‘mentoring’ or ‘capacity building’ to explore the interactive generation of Researcher selves; temper commitments to generalisability with recognition of the inherent value of the particular; and pay more attention to the unintended outcomes of Research, and especially its production of waste.

Sarah C. White - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • A Space for Unlearning? A Relational Perspective on North–South Development Research
    The European Journal of Development Research, 2020
    Co-Authors: Sarah C. White
    Abstract:

    Les politiques du savoir constituent une base fondamentale de la recherche pour le développement. Cela implique de remettre en question les processus de production du savoir, ainsi que les termes des « partenariats » ou des « collaborations » qui sont impliqués. De telles analyses ont tendance à mettre l’accent sur les différences structurelles et peuvent reproduire tous les tropes bien connus d’un Nord dominant et d’un Sud déficitaire. Cet article adopte plutôt une perspective relationnelle pour étudier la façon dont ces notions sont produites, soutenues et peuvent être contestées par des interactions entre les personnes, et entre les personnes et leurs contextes. En ce qui concerne les données, l’article s’appuie sur les expériences et les observations liées à une série d’ateliers réalisés en 2018-19 sur les collaborations internationales dans la recherche sur le développement. Il fait valoir la nécessité: d’aller au-delà de l’accent mis sur le « mentorat » ou le « renforcement des capacités » pour explorer la création interactive du soi chercheur; de tempérer les engagements de généralisabilité en reconnaissant la valeur intrinsèque du particulier; et d’accorder plus d’attention aux résultats inattendus de la recherche, et en particulier à sa production de déchets. The politics of knowledge is a foundational issue in Development Research. This includes questioning the processes through which knowledge is produced and the terms of the ‘partnerships’ or ‘collaborations’ involved. Such analyses tend to emphasise structural difference and can reproduce all too familiar tropes of dominating global North and deficit global South. This paper takes instead a relational perspective to investigate how such notions are generated, sustained and may be contested through interactions between people, and between people and their contexts. For data, the paper draws on experiences and observations related in a 2018–2019 workshop series on international collaborations in Development Research. It argues the need to go beyond a focus on ‘mentoring’ or ‘capacity building’ to explore the interactive generation of Researcher selves; temper commitments to generalisability with recognition of the inherent value of the particular; and pay more attention to the unintended outcomes of Research, and especially its production of waste.