Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10071/27140
Author(s): Pereira, C.
Editor: Cláudia Pereira
Joana Azevedo
Date: 2019
Title: A new skilled emigration dynamic: Portuguese nurses and recruitment in the southern European periphery
Book title/volume: New and old routes of Portuguese emigration: Uncertain futures at the periphery of Europe
Pages: 97 - 121
Collection title and number: IMISCOE research series
Reference: Pereira, C. (2019). A new skilled emigration dynamic: Portuguese nurses and recruitment in the southern European periphery. EM Cláudia Pereira, Joana Azevedo (Eds.). New and old routes of Portuguese emigration: Uncertain futures at the periphery of Europe (pp. 97-121). IMISCOE research series. Springer. 10.1007/978-3-030-15134-8_5
ISSN: 2364-4087
ISBN: 978-3-030-15134-8
DOI (Digital Object Identifier): 10.1007/978-3-030-15134-8_5
Keywords: Skilled migration
Migration of nurses
Recrutamento -- Recruitment
Europe periphery
Emigração -- Emigration
Immigration
Abstract: Philippine and Indian nurses have been emigrating for many years, but Portu-guese nurses and other South and East Europeans have recently started to replace them in the UK. This study focuses on the recent migration of Portuguese nurses – both as emigrants and immigrants – within the European area. The research mixes extensive and intensive methodologies. Health agencies start-ed to recruit heavily among Portuguese nurses after 2008, which often led to their decision to leave the country with a guaranteed job abroad. In turn, this dynamic of emigration being motived by institutional and recruitment networks was caused by a structural factor: the barriers erected in 2010 by UK immigration pol-icies against the contracting of nurses from outside the EU, which led the job agencies to search for nurses inside Europe. The chapter’s main finding is that alt-hough the push factor of economic recession and increased unemployment that hit the European periphery after the 2008 financial crisis played a role in the out-flow of Portuguese nurses, it was the pull factor that was more significant. The second finding is that this new mass emigration of nurses is not just a Portuguese phenomenon but rather is in keeping with other Southern and East European pe-ripheral countries.
Peerreviewed: no
Access type: Open Access
Appears in Collections:CIES-CLI - Capítulos de livros internacionais

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