Exploring the new North of the South? A qualitative study of Venezuelans migrating to Chile since 2013 and the push and pull factors influencing South-South Migration in Latin America
(2018) MIDM19 20181Department of Human Geography
LUMID International Master programme in applied International Development and Management
- Abstract
- With the wide-ranging crisis in Venezuela exacerbating since 2014 and Chile consolidating its leading economic position within Latin America, the number of Venezuelan immigrants in Chile has significantly grown. This paper aims to understand the push and pull factors of Venezuelans migrating to Chile and their perceived integration. The broader purpose is to better understand the push and pull factors influencing South-South migration, specifically within Latin America. The research design took the form of a qualitative case study and the primary data was collected in 2017 in Santiago de Chile, consisting of nineteen interviews with Venezuelan immigrants from different sectors and two expert interviews. The subsequent transcription and... (More)
- With the wide-ranging crisis in Venezuela exacerbating since 2014 and Chile consolidating its leading economic position within Latin America, the number of Venezuelan immigrants in Chile has significantly grown. This paper aims to understand the push and pull factors of Venezuelans migrating to Chile and their perceived integration. The broader purpose is to better understand the push and pull factors influencing South-South migration, specifically within Latin America. The research design took the form of a qualitative case study and the primary data was collected in 2017 in Santiago de Chile, consisting of nineteen interviews with Venezuelan immigrants from different sectors and two expert interviews. The subsequent transcription and thematic coding of the interviews on NVivo helped quantify and analyze some of the findings. Insecurity, inflation and economic instability represented the main push factors for the respondents to leave Venezuela. Chile’s economic stability, legal facilities and employment opportunities were their main pull factors. Chile’s advanced regional position, cultural/linguistic proximity, security levels, stability and opportunities for immigrants contributed to their decision to stay within Latin America. With the ‘North’ increasingly closing its borders and intraregional migration growing, Chile appears to be perceived as the ‘new North’ of the South in Latin America. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/8939580
- author
- de la Hoz Schilling, Mario LU
- supervisor
-
- Olle Frödin LU
- organization
- course
- MIDM19 20181
- year
- 2018
- type
- H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
- subject
- keywords
- South-South migration, intraregional migration, push and pull factors, Venezuela, Chile, Latin America, South America, North of the South
- language
- English
- id
- 8939580
- date added to LUP
- 2018-09-03 11:30:33
- date last changed
- 2018-09-03 11:30:33
@misc{8939580, abstract = {{With the wide-ranging crisis in Venezuela exacerbating since 2014 and Chile consolidating its leading economic position within Latin America, the number of Venezuelan immigrants in Chile has significantly grown. This paper aims to understand the push and pull factors of Venezuelans migrating to Chile and their perceived integration. The broader purpose is to better understand the push and pull factors influencing South-South migration, specifically within Latin America. The research design took the form of a qualitative case study and the primary data was collected in 2017 in Santiago de Chile, consisting of nineteen interviews with Venezuelan immigrants from different sectors and two expert interviews. The subsequent transcription and thematic coding of the interviews on NVivo helped quantify and analyze some of the findings. Insecurity, inflation and economic instability represented the main push factors for the respondents to leave Venezuela. Chile’s economic stability, legal facilities and employment opportunities were their main pull factors. Chile’s advanced regional position, cultural/linguistic proximity, security levels, stability and opportunities for immigrants contributed to their decision to stay within Latin America. With the ‘North’ increasingly closing its borders and intraregional migration growing, Chile appears to be perceived as the ‘new North’ of the South in Latin America.}}, author = {{de la Hoz Schilling, Mario}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Student Paper}}, title = {{Exploring the new North of the South? A qualitative study of Venezuelans migrating to Chile since 2013 and the push and pull factors influencing South-South Migration in Latin America}}, year = {{2018}}, }