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Engaging the Diaspora to Deal with Brain Drain

Brain Drain, or the migration of skilled and educated individuals from one nation to another, is first and foremost a response to lack of opportunities at home. This phenomenon has adversely affected many countries, especially in Africa, where retaining capacity is often a more important issue than capacity development itself. However, in recent years, countries like India and China, which have exported their brightest for decades, have started to reverse this trend. Studies show that effectively managing the diaspora has played a large role in capacity development by creating jobs, raising incomes and generating disciplined, efficient workforces that have in turn provided a platform for economic growth. This section of the website deals with the issues related to management of diaspora and dealing with brain drain.

Suggested reading:


 Legend: papers Papers web site Web Sites case studies Case Studies

papers

The International Mobility of Talent and its Impact on Global Development: An Overview (DOC 121 kb)

papers

Work Globally, Develop Locally: Diaspora Networks as Springboards of Knowledge-Based Development (DOC 124 kb)

papers

Leveraging National S&T and Business Talent Abroad (PPT 780 kb)

papers

Human Capital Flight: Stratification, Globalization and the Challenges to Tertiary Education in Africa (DOC 270 kb)
 case studiesRemittances, Household Expenditure, and Investment in Guatemala
 web siteBrain Drain and Capacity Building in Africa
 case studiesSkilled Labour Migration from Developing Countries (PDF  PDF 1.65 mb)

case studies

African Migration (DOC 33 kb)

web site

International Migration and Development 
 web site

International Organization for Migration 

 papers"Brain Drain" and the Global Mobility of High-Skilled Talent (PDF  PDF 116 kb)



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