Project overview
This research examined the role of gender in the relationship between migration – especially international migration – and development, with specific relevance to remittances.
In recent years, migration has played an increasingly prominent role in the international debate on development. A key role in this new debate on migration and development (or ‘the migration–development nexus’) is played by remittances. But remittances are overwhelmingly seen in economic and financial terms. Although gender plays a fundamental role in the mechanics of remitting, remittances are almost never analysed through a gendered perspective.
Funded by the UN-INSTRAW (United Nations International Research and Training Institute for the Advancement of Women) as part of a multi-country project, the research studied migration and the gendering of remittances in a small rural cluster of Southeast Albania, and related migration networks to the neighbouring Greek city of Thessaloniki. A mixed methods approach was adopted including a questionnaire survey of 350 remittance-receiving rural households in Albania, and 45 seminar-structured in-depth interviews with some of these families, migrants in Greece, and return migrants. A number of roundtable discussions were organised with academics, local, regional and national level policymakers, government representatives, representatives of migrant organisations and INGOs, and money transfer companies, in both Albania and Greece, to stimulate discussions around the gendering of remittances and its connection to local and national development.
In recent years, migration has played an increasingly prominent role in the international debate on development. A key role in this new debate on migration and development (or ‘the migration–development nexus’) is played by remittances. But remittances are overwhelmingly seen in economic and financial terms. Although gender plays a fundamental role in the mechanics of remitting, remittances are almost never analysed through a gendered perspective.
Funded by the UN-INSTRAW (United Nations International Research and Training Institute for the Advancement of Women) as part of a multi-country project, the research studied migration and the gendering of remittances in a small rural cluster of Southeast Albania, and related migration networks to the neighbouring Greek city of Thessaloniki. A mixed methods approach was adopted including a questionnaire survey of 350 remittance-receiving rural households in Albania, and 45 seminar-structured in-depth interviews with some of these families, migrants in Greece, and return migrants. A number of roundtable discussions were organised with academics, local, regional and national level policymakers, government representatives, representatives of migrant organisations and INGOs, and money transfer companies, in both Albania and Greece, to stimulate discussions around the gendering of remittances and its connection to local and national development.
Staff
Other researchers
Collaborating research institutes, centres and groups
Research outputs
Russell King, Diana Mata-Codesal & Julie Vullnetari,
2013, Comparative Migration Studies, 1(1), 69-96
Type: article
Julie Vullnetari,
2012, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 38(8), 1305-1325
Type: article
Russell King & Julie Vullnetari,
2012, Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society, 5(2), 207-220
DOI: 10.1093/cjres/rss004
Type: article
Of corridors and dyads: unpacking the family dynamics of remittance transfers to Albania and Ecuador
Diana Mata-Codesal, Russell King & Julie Vullnetari,
2011
Type: workingPaper
Julie Vullnetari & Russell King,
2011
Type: book