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A Longitudinal Analysts of Immigrant Occupational Mobility: A Test of the Immigrant Assimilation Hypothesis
345
Citations
21
References
2005
Year
Human MigrationEmigrationEthnicityGlobal MigrationInternal MigrationInternational Factor MobilityImmigrant Assimilation HypothesisLabor MigrationLongitudinal SurveyLabor Market IntegrationPublic HealthMigration PolicyLongitudinal AnalystsWorkforce MobilityEconomicsPopulation MigrationLabor EconomicsPre-immigration OccupationCultureImmigrant Occupational MobilityWorkforce DevelopmentSociologyBusinessU-shaped PatternMigrant WorkerDemographyImmigrant HealthImmigration
This article develops a model of the occupational mobility of immigrants and tests the hypotheses using data on males from the Longitudinal Survey of Immigrants to Australia, Panel I. The theoretical model generates hypotheses regarding a U-shaped pattern of occupational mobility from the “last job” in the origin, to the “first job” in the destination, to subsequent jobs in the destination, and regarding the depth of the “U.” The survey includes data on pre-immigration occupation, the “first” occupation in Australia (at six months) and the occupation after about three-and-a-half years in Australia. The hypotheses are supported by the empirical analysis.
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