Nassim Majidi

ORCID: 0000-0001-7066-0045
Publications
Citations
Views
---
Saved
---
About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Politics and Conflicts in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Middle East
  • Migration and Labor Dynamics
  • Migration, Health and Trauma
  • Migration, Refugees, and Integration
  • Belt and Road Initiative
  • Historical and Contemporary Political Dynamics
  • China's Global Influence and Migration
  • Global Security and Public Health
  • Education and experiences of immigrants and refugees
  • Climate Change, Adaptation, Migration
  • Crime, Illicit Activities, and Governance
  • African Studies and Geopolitics
  • Immigration and Intercultural Education
  • Peacebuilding and International Security
  • Terrorism, Counterterrorism, and Political Violence
  • Political Conflict and Governance
  • HIV/AIDS Impact and Responses
  • Rural development and sustainability
  • Migration, Aging, and Tourism Studies
  • Retirement, Disability, and Employment
  • Migration, Ethnicity, and Economy
  • South Asian Studies and Conflicts
  • Middle East Politics and Society
  • Global Peace and Security Dynamics
  • Employment and Welfare Studies

Tufts University
2020-2023

University of the Witwatersrand
2020-2023

Oxford University Press (United Kingdom)
2023

Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology
2023

University of Göttingen
2023

University College London
2023

Arturo Prat University
2023

The University of Melbourne
2023

McMaster University
2023

Sarah Samuels Center for Public Health & Evaluation
2016-2020

Deportation, understood as the physical removal of someone against their will from territory one state to that another, has moved forefront academic and policy agendas.Although there is a growing literature on legislation policy, very little in-depth data what happens post-deportation.In this article, we examine possible post-deportation outcomes.We argue that, whatever reasons existed for people migrate in first place, deportation adds these creates at least three additional make...

10.1093/migration/mns011 article EN Migration Studies 2013-05-08

AbstractMany, if not most, of those who are forcibly expelled from the country to which they have migrated will settle in been returned but leave again. A recent article examined some reasons why this should be so. It was argued that addition factors had caused original migration, such as fear persecution, continuing conflict, insecurity, poverty and lack opportunity, deportation creates at least three additional make re-migration most likely outcome. These were debt, family commitments...

10.1080/1369183x.2014.957174 article EN Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 2014-10-30

This article uses an ecological systems approach to detail community involvement in smuggling Afghanistan and Somalia—two countries that have similar patterns of irregular outmigration the West geopolitical human security dynamics. I emphasize connections family ties as key points around which migration takes place persists. In both these countries, smugglers are members local communities. The social organization is strongest at community-based origin, then weakens migrants get farther from...

10.1177/0002716217751895 article EN The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 2018-02-21

Abstract Researchers' methodological decisions have an impact on who gets to hear a refugees' story, the meaning story conveys, and, consequently, implications might for forced migrants. What we as researchers, or aid workers, do with stories gathered from migrants can contribute their social and political invisibility, our scholarship be tool amplify refugee voices forms of knowledge that are valid not only testimony but expertise design research, programmes policies. potential such methods...

10.1093/jrs/feab071 article EN Journal of Refugee Studies 2021-04-30

Retour sur terre: politiques de retour et d'allocation la terre pour les réfugiés afghans.Plus 6 millions afghans sont retournés dans leur pays d'origine depuis 2002, dont 4.6 assistés par le Haut-commissariat aux Réfugiés des Nations Unies (UNHCR). Ce était, en nombre investissement, sans précédent l'Afghanistan comme reste du monde. Alors que l'intervention 2002 marque début d'une décennie retour, 2012, est reflet d'un contexte humanitaire développement marqué un taux très faible retours...

10.4000/remmm.8098 article FR cc-by-nc-sa Revue des mondes musulmans et de la Méditerranée 2013-06-08

10.1007/s12134-022-00963-0 article EN Journal of International Migration and Integration / Revue de l integration et de la migration internationale 2022-05-17

Abstract Decisions on the return of Afghans from Europe are often based perceived support that communities and social networks can provide. This assumption shapes court decisions over asylum cases is factored in assistance packages upon return. It assumed will act as a “safety net” for returnee . However, recent evidence post‐return outcomes shows migrants’ may not provide them with resources they need to reintegrate their country origin. While role destination contexts has been extensively...

10.1111/imig.12786 article EN International Migration 2020-11-06

We have recently taken over as Book Reviews editors for Migration and Society wanted to use this opportunity introduce ourselves, well the rich selection of books reviewed in current issue. As co-editors section, we will prioritize book reviews that are critical their approach aligned with ethos journal. seek represent diversity our field encourage readers, publishers, authors share us straddle multiple disciplines, epistemologies, methodological approaches can provide readers a range...

10.3167/arms.2024.070121 article EN cc-by-nc-nd Migration and Society 2024-06-01

The European migration “crisis” has led to new policy and funding mechanisms, such as the Trust Fund for Africa from UK Home Office that have in common a dual, often contradictory, objective: support migrant protection, while reinforcing management or control agenda. They given flexibility, context of “crisis response,” range actors with different levels responsibilities transparency when reaching out migrants, at times detriment one aspect (the respect human rights) benefit another...

10.1177/00027642231183268 article EN American Behavioral Scientist 2023-07-02
Coming Soon ...