A Research Agenda for Migration and Health

Elgar Research Agendas

Edited by K. Bruce Newbold, School of Geography and Earth Sciences, McMaster University and Kathi Wilson, Department of Geography, University of Toronto, Mississauga, Canada

Evidenced by Europe’s refugee crisis and the movement of undocumented workers into the US, international migration has emerged as one of the most pressing issues faced by national and regional governments. The health impacts of migration can be significant and multifaceted, with access to health care often denied or limited, with immigrants experiencing declining health. The health of more vulnerable groups, including women and the disabled, is further compromised. A Research Agenda for Migration and Health provides insight into key research directions and scholarship, with topics including food security, disability, cultural safety, and health care access.

‘A timely contribution to the field of migration and health, and a valuable resource for researchers seeking to explore newer questions. The nine chapters in this book offer diverse perspectives on themes such as inequity and discrimination in access to healthcare, gender, cultural safety, food security, disability and climate change as experienced by immigrants from countries in the Global South. The authors challenge and demystify pre-existing frameworks on migrant health, seek to broaden the theoretical and
methodological scope of the field and provide a research agenda for future work.’
– Divya Ravindranath, Progress in Development Studies

‘It is a valuable resource for those seeking to refine their research questions and as a means to draw parallels across work on migration and health. While focused on international migration, the questions and approaches outlined are relevant to research on internal migration, and there is significant space to better articulate the connections between internal migration, international migration, and health.’
– Frances Darlington-Pollock, Geographical Research

‘Bruce Newbold and Kathi Wilson are both health geographers with a strong legacy; this edited volume on which they have partnered is no exception. As they state in their opening chapter, the health of an immigrant is shaped by the immigration journey and the factors precipitating it (forced versus voluntary; economic, social, cultural, environmental push and pull factors…). What Newbold and Wilson have done with this edited volume is bring the immigrant health literature into the 21st Century by bringing heretofore invisible issues to the forefront: gender; climate change; inequalities in the global south. Their section on future research directions takes us even further through suggestions for alternative theoretical and epistemological approaches to the growing issues of immigration and immigrant health.’
– Susan J Elliot, University of Waterloo, Canada

‘Tapping into the expertise from scholars in geography, international affairs, nursing, psychiatry, public health, social service and social work, A Research Agenda for Migration and Health fills a gap in migration studies by foregrounding climate change, gender/race and health, health status, health care, nutrition and their impacts.’
——李魏,亚利桑那州立大学,US

2019 176 pp Hardback 978 1 78643 835 5 £80.00£72.00 $120.00$108.00
2020 176 pp Paperback 978 1 80037 947 3 £23.00£18.40 $37.00$29.60

Elgaronline 978 1 78643 836 2

Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd. is registered in the UK at: The Lypiatts, 15 Lansdown Road,
Cheltenham, Glos GL50 2JA. Registered number: 2041703

How To Order

Online

m.ingmedical.com

Get up to 20% discount when you order online

By Email

UK/ROW:[email protected]

N/S America:[email protected]

By Phone

UK/ROW:+44 (0) 1243 843291

N/S America:(800) 390 - 3149

Connect With Us

Find us on Facebook

facebook.com/EdwardElgarPublishing

Follow us on Twitter

For news, views and offers

@ElgarPublishing

Read our Blog

For news, views and debate from our authors and readers.

https://www.elgar.blog

For More Information

UK/ROW:[email protected]

N/S America:[email protected]lgar.com