Introduction: ways of migration and people on the move

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17649/TET.27.2.2546

Keywords:

Vojvodina, forced migration, educational migration, labour migration, transnational migration, ethnic migration, integration of migrants, old and new homes

Abstract

This special issue of Tér és Társadalom presents some results of an international research project carried out by researchers from Switzerland, Hungary and Serbia between 2010 and 2012. The topic of the research was “Integrating (Trans-)national Migrants in Transition States” (TRANSMIG) and was financed by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF). The research aimed to explore and interpret migration flows from the Vojvodina (Serbia) to Hungary and from ex-Yugoslav republics to the Vojvodina. In the first period of the last twenty years, wars which contributed to the disintegration of Yugoslavia and the formation of new national states have caused migration flows. After the change of the millennium, educational migration of Vojvodina Hungarian youth can be considered the most important migratory movement from the Vojvodina to Hungary. Labour (economic) migration also occurs, but this cannot be understood as a one-way movement, since in the Hungarian–Serbian border zone migrants from the Vojvodina who already resettled to Hungary commute to the Vojvodina.

While interpreting the qualitative research data the theoretical frameworks and approaches of transnational space, transnationalism and ethnic migration were taken into consideration. The migration movement in question occurs in a transnational social space where migrants are in constant motion. By their movements and actions that space is continually recreated. With Ludger Pries we see a transnational migrant as an ideal type to whom individual migratory movements and positions only approximate. Based on our empirical results we can conclude that real pluri-local, intensive and long-lasting bonding to two places at the same time and the relating practices only characterise a minority of migrants and certain sections of migratory careers.

In the migration processes studied, ethnicity as a term is needed as a “structural factor” and frame of interpretation to approach migrant experiences. All three explanatory models for ethnic migration – return migration, economic migration, migration motivated by grievances suffered in a minority situation – are suitable to analyse the reasons that initiated migration and kept it in motion. They are helpful in interpreting migrant narratives. However, none of the reasons can claim exclusive validity. Agreeing with other researchers, we find Roger Brubaker’s definition the most useful: Ethnic migration should be comprehended in a broad sense. In addition, every migration can be considered as “ethnically” motivated where ethnicity plays a dominant role as a cultural and symbolic capital.

Author Biographies

Monika Mária Váradi , CERSHAS Institute for Regional Studies

senior research fellow

Doris Wastl-Walter , University of Berne

professor of Human Geography, vice-rectrice of the University of Berne

Béla Filep , Institute of Geography, University of Berne

postdoctoral research fellow

Irén Gábrity Molnár , Faculty of Economics, University of Novi Sad, Subotica

professor

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Published

2013-06-03

How to Cite

Váradi, M. M., Wastl-Walter, D., Filep, B. and Gábrity Molnár, I. (2013) “Introduction: ways of migration and people on the move”, Tér és Társadalom, 27(2), pp. 3–34. doi: 10.17649/TET.27.2.2546.