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2012
DOI: 10.5897/ijsa12.029
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Toward an agenda for placing migrant hometown associations (HTAs) in migration policy-making discourse in Ghana

Abstract: Migrant hometown associations (HTAs) are arguably the most recognizable migrant institutions in migration destination countries. As institutions for the welfare of migrants and for the development of migrant home and destination countries, migrant HTAs have engaged the attention of migration scholars for a number of reasons. Their activities straddle across different spheres of endeavours, including adjustment and integration, development, promotion of peaceful co-existence, socio-cultural empowerment, and res… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The money for funding these activities is collected mainly in the context of intercultural festivals (especially the "music festival," which takes place every year around the third week of June to celebrate the arrival of summer and where the Association of Chilean residents often had a stall selling food and drinks), the Chilean national day which takes place in September, or through associative meals. These Latin American social workers practice forms of cooperation that are very common among migrants' hometown associations, as evidenced by different empirical studies in the United States and elsewhere (Antwi Bosiako, 2012;Orozco & Rouse, 2007;Sommerville, Duran, & Terrazas, 2008).…”
Section: Local Social Work and Transnational Civic Activitiesmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…The money for funding these activities is collected mainly in the context of intercultural festivals (especially the "music festival," which takes place every year around the third week of June to celebrate the arrival of summer and where the Association of Chilean residents often had a stall selling food and drinks), the Chilean national day which takes place in September, or through associative meals. These Latin American social workers practice forms of cooperation that are very common among migrants' hometown associations, as evidenced by different empirical studies in the United States and elsewhere (Antwi Bosiako, 2012;Orozco & Rouse, 2007;Sommerville, Duran, & Terrazas, 2008).…”
Section: Local Social Work and Transnational Civic Activitiesmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Migrants form associations for various reasons, such as promoting adjustment and integration, development of the members, promotion of peaceful co-existence with the population of the host country, socio-cultural empowerment, and conflict resolution (Antwi Bosiakoh, 2012). However, these hometown or locality-based associations are common.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%