scholarly journals Risk Attitudes and Household Migration Decisions

2020 ◽  
pp. 1019-10513R1
Author(s):  
Christian Dustmann ◽  
Francesco Fasani ◽  
Xin Meng ◽  
Luigi Minale
Author(s):  
Christian Dustmann ◽  
Francesco Fasani ◽  
Xin Meng ◽  
Luigi Minale

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Dustmann ◽  
Francesco Fasani ◽  
Xin Meng ◽  
Luigi Minale

Author(s):  
Roberto Roca Paz ◽  
Silke Uebelmesser

2016 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 119-157 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara R. Curran ◽  
Jacqueline Meijer-Irons ◽  
Filiz Garip

Classic migration theory predicts that individual and household migration decisions are partially responsive to economic pushes from origin communities and pulls from destinations. Recent theorizing argues that this basic relationship is fundamentally influenced by the experiences accumulated within migrant streams, connecting potential migrants with future migrants between origin and destination. Drawing upon a 16-year study of migrant departures and returns from 22 villages in northeastern Thailand, we extend current knowledge about these fundamental relationships before, during, and after Thailand's economic crisis of 1997. We answer the following questions: How are migrant departures from the origin affected by the crisis, how are migrant returns to origin communities affected by the crisis, and how do migrants’ accumulated experiences connecting origin and destination moderate these relationships? We examine effects separately for men and women since village and destination economies are sufficiently sex differentiated. We find that migrant selectivity partially explains year effects: that is, earlier periods are more highly selective. Migrant cumulative experiences facilitate migration throughout the time period and modestly influence the migration decisions during economic downturns, but these effects are far more important for women than for men. For return migration, year effects emerge only for the post 1997–98 period and only after controlling for migrant social capital and occupational sector. Origin-based migrant social capital slightly, but significantly, reduces the odds of return migration throughout the period of observation. However, migrant social capital does amplify the likelihood of return migration after the Asian Financial Crisis. Construction workers are the most likely to return to their origin villages after the Asian Financial Crisis, while manufacturing, service, and agricultural workers show little change in behavior.


2005 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hilde Iversen ◽  
Torbjørn Rundmo ◽  
Hroar Klempe

Abstract. The core aim of the present study is to compare the effects of a safety campaign and a behavior modification program on traffic safety. As is the case in community-based health promotion, the present study's approach of the attitude campaign was based on active participation of the group of recipients. One of the reasons why many attitude campaigns conducted previously have failed may be that they have been society-based public health programs. Both the interventions were carried out simultaneously among students aged 18-19 years in two Norwegian high schools (n = 342). At the first high school the intervention was behavior modification, at the second school a community-based attitude campaign was carried out. Baseline and posttest data on attitudes toward traffic safety and self-reported risk behavior were collected. The results showed that there was a significant total effect of the interventions although the effect depended on the type of intervention. There were significant differences in attitude and behavior only in the sample where the attitude campaign was carried out and no significant changes were found in the group of recipients of behavior modification.


Decision ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 95-118 ◽  
Author(s):  
Han Bleichrodt ◽  
Olivier L'Haridon ◽  
David Van Ass

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