Transnationalism Survey Measurement
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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Sources
- Portes, A. (2003). Conclusion: Theoretical Convergencies and Empirical Evidence in the Study of Immigrant Transnationalism. International Migration Review, 37(3), 874-892. DOI: 10.1111/j.1747-7379.2003.tb00161.x ↗
- Portes, A., Guarnizo, L. E., & Landolt, P. (1999). The Study of Transnationalism: Pitfalls and Promise of an Emergent Research Field. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 22(2), 217-237. DOI: 10.1080/014198799329468 ↗
How to cite this page
ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Survey Measurement of Immigrant Transnationalism. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/migration-studies/transnationalism-survey-measurement
Which method?
Set this method beside its closest kin and read them side by side — the library lays the books on the table; the choice is yours.
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