| Asunto: | [generourban] The VIIIth Conference of Association of Caribbean Economists | | Fecha: | Martes, 22 de Julio, 2003 20:13:42 (+0200) | | Autor: | Pour Marie-Christine Lacoste <anne @.........net>
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CALL FOR PAPERS
The VIIIth Conference of Association of Caribbean Economists
"Diaspora, Migration and the Global Caribbean Economy."
Port-au-Prince, Haiti, in November 2003.
http://www.sta.uwi.edu/ace/Conferences/diasporaconf.htm
Overall objective
The Association of Caribbean Economists (ACE) has embarked on a number
of
projects and initiatives that are premised on the theme of Diasporic
Economics as a new and emerging theme with relevance to all language
areas
of the Caribbean. The VIIIth biannual ACE Conference scheduled for
November
2003 will bring together a wide range of scholars and researchers to report
on research methodologies and initial findings. The Conference will create
greater awareness of the impact and prospects for diasporic economic
relations and offer the opportunity to prepare a work program that includes
training seminars and publications targeted at public policy-makers, NGDOs,
the academic community, and the wider public.
Main theme
Migration and the creation of an extra-regional diasporic community in the
North Atlantic countries has been a key survival strategy for Caribbean
people since the twentieth century. It is estimated that the Caribbean
region exports more people as a percentage of its population than any other
region in the world. It is observed that the growth of the Caribbean
Diaspora helps to relieve population pressure, alleviates unemployment,
funnels remittances to home countries, creates export markets for specialty
and cultural goods and services, facilitates technology diffusion from core
economies, and generates diasporic tourism.
Diasporic relations, however, are not an unqualified success. There is much
concern about issues such as "brain drain" that depletes poor economies of
valuable human capital (e.g. professionals and entrepreneurs) and
subsidizes the labor reproduction costs of rich economies. There is also
some concern that remittances may increase external dependency, promote
Western consumption styles and cause inflationary pressures.
In addition, it is argued that migration and diasporization have presented
new security and health risks to the Caribbean economy associated with
mobile populations like seasonal farm workers, deported criminals, return
migrants, sex workers and tourists. Gender relations are impacted as well
by the shift in labor markets in the core economies towards services as
reflected in the growth of female migrants in jobs like domestics, nurses
and teachers.
These issues have only recently gained saliency in academic research.
There
is no denying that diasporization has lead to the emergence of a "Global
Caribbean Economy" that transcends the boundaries of the Caribbean Basin.
The diasporic economy contributes to the growth and diversification of the
Caribbean political economy as well as the strategic repositioning of the
region’s international relations.
The contribution and potential of diasporic relations to Caribbean
development requires further documentation, measurement, and evaluation.
There is also a great need to identity ways in which the trends and
processes of diasporization can be enhanced to the benefit of the region.
The Conference will also require an appreciation of the changing
geopolitical and economic context for immigration into the countries of the
North Atlantic.
The Conference will give special attention to the case of host country
Haiti, including such topics as the geopolitics of aid and migration, the
role of the Diaspora in Haitian development, and globalization and
Caribbean regionalism seen against the background of 200 years of Haitian
sovereignty.
Submission of paper proposals
Abstracts of no more than 250 words are to be sent to the address below no
later than 31 August 2003. Abstracts should include name, institutional
affiliation, full postal address, phone/fax numbers and e-mail address.
Listed below is a range of possible themes and issues for panelists.
§ Financial remittances
§ Diasporic tourism
§ Cultural exports
§ Specialty goods exports
§ Diasporic trade diplomacy
§ Diaspora and security
§ Immigration policies
§ Migration economics
§ Gender and overseas work
§ Economic diplomacy
§ Technological diffusion
§ Brain drain and brain gain
______________________
Marie-Christine LACOSTE, CNRS
Coordinadora de "RUMBOS"
Lista de Informacion Cientifica y Red de Investigadores
sobre y de America Latina - Ciencias Sociales y Humanas -
Idiomas de la Lista : Espanol, Frances, Ingles, Portugues
GRAL - Maison de la Recherche, Université de Toulouse-le-Mirail
5, Allées Antonio Machado - 31058 Toulouse Cedex 9 (France)
Tél : (33) (0)5 61 50 43 08 Fax : (33) (0)5 61 50 49 25
e.mail : lacoste @univ-tlse2.fr
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Generourban
Calle San Bernardo, 117
E 28015 Madrid
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