Compare methods
Review your selected methods side by side; rows that differ are highlighted.
| Diaspora Engagement Mapping× | Transnationalism Survey Measurement× | |
|---|---|---|
| Field | Migration Studies | Migration Studies |
| Family | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Year of origin≠ | 2014 | 2003 |
| Originator≠ | Alan Gamlen | Alejandro Portes; Luis Eduardo Guarnizo & Patricia Landolt |
| Type≠ | Inventory-and-classification pipeline for state diaspora policy | Survey-measurement pipeline for cross-border activity |
| Seminal source≠ | Gamlen, A. (2014). Diaspora Institutions and Diaspora Governance. International Migration Review, 48(s1), S180-S217. DOI ↗ | Portes, A. (2003). Conclusion: Theoretical Convergencies and Empirical Evidence in the Study of Immigrant Transnationalism. International Migration Review, 37(3), 874-892. DOI ↗ |
| Aliases | Diaspora Institution Inventory, Emigrant Engagement Policy Mapping, Diaspora Governance Mapping, Origin-State Diaspora Policy Audit | Transnational Activities Survey, CIEP-Style Transnationalism Measurement, Cross-Border Activity Measurement, Immigrant Transnationalism Typology |
| Related | 3 | 3 |
| Summary≠ | Diaspora engagement mapping is a systematic method for inventorying the institutions and policies through which states reach out to, claim, and govern their populations abroad. Alan Gamlen's 2014 work on diaspora institutions and diaspora governance showed that since the 1990s a striking number of states have created dedicated ministries, offices, councils, and programs aimed at emigrants and their descendants, turning the diaspora into an object of deliberate statecraft. The method catalogues these bodies and classifies what they do, distinguishing capacity-building (cultivating a diaspora identity and the institutions to reach it), extending rights (offering citizenship, voting, and protections abroad), and extracting obligations (mobilizing remittances, investment, lobbying, and taxes). By coding which instruments each state deploys and how they change over time, the analyst maps the evolving web of ties binding origin states to their emigrants. The product is both a descriptive atlas of who is governed how and an analytic tool for comparing diaspora-engagement strategies across countries and explaining why they spread. | Transnationalism survey measurement is the set of techniques for turning the slippery idea of immigrant transnationalism — living life across borders — into countable survey data. Alejandro Portes and his collaborators, working through the Comparative Immigrant Entrepreneurship Project (CIEP) and related studies, argued that transnationalism should be reserved for activities that require regular, sustained cross-border involvement, not the occasional phone call or holiday visit that virtually every immigrant makes. Their 1999 programmatic statement with Guarnizo and Landolt laid out the pitfalls of a concept stretched to cover everything, and Portes's 2003 synthesis distilled the empirical lessons into a measurement strategy. The method asks respondents about specific economic, political, and sociocultural cross-border activities, records how often each is performed, and uses an intensity threshold to separate genuinely transnational individuals from the merely connected. From these items the analyst builds a typology by domain and intensity and then estimates how common transnationalism is and who practices it. The result disciplines a fashionable but vague concept into a measurable, comparable construct. |
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