Return migration

Return migration refers to the individual or family decision of a migrant to leave a host country and to return permanently to the country of origin. Research topics include the return migration process, motivations for returning, the experiences returnees encounter, and the impacts of return migration on both the host and the home countries.

The exact numbers are debated, but Mark Wyman concludes: "The totals are so enormous: at least one-third of the 52 million Europeans who left Europe between 1824 and 1924 returned permanently to their homelands."

"Return migration" can be contrasted with repatriation, which is imposed by the host government on a specified group of immigrants. It should also be distinguished from circular migration, in which migrants repeatedly travel between origin and destination countries, for example to plant and harvest crops each season.

Motivations
Return migration to the original home by migrants living in their new home can be motivated by numerous factors, singly or in combination. Some common motivations for return migration are:
 * Economic factors: Individuals may choose to return to their home country if they believe there are better job prospects, or the opportunity to purchase a farm with money earned abroad. They may go back because a deep economic downturn in the host economy undermines their opportunities. By the 1890s, German and Scandinavian immigrants had established prosperous farms and small businesses in the U.S. and were reluctant to return.


 * Social and cultural factors: People may decide to return to their home country to be closer to family members, to reconnect with their cultural roots, or to participate in social and community activities. Their experience abroad gives them a new status: e.g. they may be sought out to give advice to would-be emigrants. Many Italian immigrants felt alienated in the U.S., and typically stayed for only a few years.


 * Political factors can operate in the host or the home country: changes in political regimes, policy reforms, or improvements in governance may encourage individuals who had previously migrated to return to their home country. Their ethnicity might be a cause of intolerable discrimination in the host country. A sudden turn for the worse in the host country's political scene might cause them to flee home. They may also bring new skills learned while abroad. Jewish and Irish immigrants rarely returned to homelands (Russia and Ireland) where they were not well treated.


 * Government factors: the host government might be hostile to immigrants, setting up barriers or threats or talking in that direction. Or the original home government might offer incentives to return, as Italy did in 1901-1927.


 * Personal reasons: An elderly migrant might wish to retire, and would thus no longer earn a high income in the host country. They may wish to return due to homesickness, a desire for familiarity, or a sense of attachment to their home country. In Kenya there is a wish to be buried alongside ancestors.

Impact on Host and home countries
Return migration can have major impacts on both the migrants themselves and the countries involved. For the migrants, it can lead to cultural readjustment, the reestablishment of social networks, and potential economic opportunities. For the countries of origin, return migration can bring back human capital, skills, and resources that contribute to development and economic growth. However, return migration is not always a smooth process. Migrants may face challenges in reintegrating into their home societies, including finding suitable employment, adapting to changes in the local environment, or dealing with the stigma associated with migration. The decision to return is often influenced by a complex interplay of individual circumstances and broader economic, social, and political factors.

Government roles
Voluntary return is the return of eligible persons, such as refugees, to their country of origin or citizenship on the basis of freely expressed willingness to such return. Voluntary return, unlike expulsion and deportation, which are actions of sovereign states, is defined as a personal right under specific conditions described in various international instruments, such as the OAU Convention, along with customary international law.

Certain countries offer financial support to refugees and immigrants to help them start a new life in their country of origin. Examples in the 21st century are:
 * The Danish government, which in 2009 began offering £12,000 each to immigrants to return,
 * Switzerland offering about 6,500 Francs, targeted for business startups upon returning home,
 * Ireland
 * In 2016, Germany allocated €150 million over three years for migrants willing to return,
 * The Swedish government began offering £3,500 each.

544 Nigerians returned home from Switzerland in 2013.

Two countries may have a re-admission agreement, which establishes procedures, on a reciprocal basis, for one state to return "irregular" non-nationals to their country of origin or to a country through which they have transited. Illegal immigrants are frequently repatriated as a matter of government policy. Repatriation measures of voluntary return, with financial assistance, as well as measures of deportation are used in many countries.

Deportation
Involuntary or forced repatriation is the return of refugees, prisoners of war, or civil detainees to their country of origin under circumstances that leave no other viable alternatives. According to modern international law, prisoners of war, civil detainees, or refugees refusing repatriation, particularly if motivated by fears of political persecution in their own country, should be protected from refoulement and given, if possible, temporary or permanent asylum. The forced return of people to countries where they would face persecution is more specifically known as refoulement, which is against international law.

Repatriation vs. return
While repatriation necessarily brings an individual to his or her territory of origin or citizenship, a return potentially includes bringing the person back to the point of departure. This could be to a third country, including a country of transit, which is a country the person has traveled through to get to the country of destination. A return could also be within the territorial boundaries of a country, as in the case of returning internally displaced persons and demobilized combatants. The distinction between repatriation and return, voluntary or involuntary, is not always clear.

Rates of return from United States by ethnicity 1899–1924
Source: Archdeacon. p 139.

Return to Asia-Pacific

 * Iredale, Robyn R., Fei Guo, and Santi Rozario, eds. Return migration in the Asia Pacific (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2003).
 * Saguin, Kidjie. "Returning broke and broken? Return migration, reintegration and transnational social protection in the Philippines." Migration and Development 9.3 (2020): 352-368.
 * Suzuki, Masao. "Success story? Japanese immigrant economic achievement and return migration, 1920–1930." Journal of Economic History 55.4 (1995): 889-901.
 * Tsay, Ching-lung, and Ji-Ping Lin. "Return Migration and Reversal of Brain Drain to Taiwan: An Analysis of the 1990 Census Data." in Migration in the Asia Pacific: Population, Settlement and Citizenship Issues (2003): 273+ online.

Return to Europe

 * Amuedo-Dorantes, Catalina, and Susan Pozo. "Assessing the effectiveness of pay-to-go policies: Evidence from Spain’s voluntary return program1." International Migration Review 52.3 (2018): 750-779.


 * Appleyard, Reginald T. "The return movement of United Kingdom migrants from Australia." Population Studies 15.3 (1962): 214-225. DOI:10.1080/00324728.1962.10406072
 * Farrell, Maura, Marie Mahon, and John McDonagh. "The rural as a return migration destination." European Countryside 4.1 (2012): 31-44. online
 * Fitzgerald, Patrick. "‘Come back, Paddy Reilly’: Aspects of Irish return migration, 1600–1845." Emigrant homecomings (Manchester University Press, 2017) pp. 32-52.
 * Gould, John D. "European inter-continental emigration. The road home: Return migration from the USA." Journal of European Economic History 9.1 (1980): 41-112. online; in-depth look at American statistics 1907-1914.
 * Killick, John. "Transatlantic steerage fares, British and Irish migration, and return migration, 1815–60." Economic History Review 67.1 (2014): 170-191.
 * Leith, Murray Stewart, and Duncan Sim. "We're No 'Awa 'Tae Bide Awa': Scotland's Returning Diaspora." Scottish Affairs 30.4 (2021): 450-471. online


 * O’Leary, Eleanor, and Diane Negra. "Emigration, return migration and surprise homecomings in post-Celtic Tiger Ireland." Irish Studies Review 24.2 (2016): 127-141.
 * Richmond, H. A. "Return Migration from Canada to Britain," Population Studies 22#1 (1969): 263-271.


 * Varricchio, Mario, ed. Back to Caledonia: Scottish Homecomings from the Seventeenth Century to the Present ((Edinburgh: John Donald, 2012).
 * Ward, Tony. "Return Migration from Nineteenth Century Australia: Key Drivers and Gender Differences." Australian Economic History Review 61.1 (2021): 80-101.

From United States

 * Alexander, J. Trent. " ' They're never here more than a year': Return Migration in the Southern Exodus, 1940-1970." Journal of Social History (2005): 653-671. online


 * Archdeacon, Thomas J. Becoming American (Simon and Schuster, 1984). online
 * Bedorf, Franziska. Sweet Home Chicago?: Mexican Migration and the Question of Belonging and Return (2018) online.


 * Caroli, Betty Boyd. Italian Repatriation from the United States, 1900-1914 (Center for Migration Studies, 1973) 110 pp. * Caroli, Betty Boyd. "Italian repatriation from the United States, 1900-1914" (PhD dissertation, New York University; ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 1972. 7221496).
 * Cerase, Francesco P. "Expectations and Reality: A Case Study of Return Migration from the United States to Southern Italy" International Migration Review 8#2 (1974), pp. 245-262 online
 * Christou, Anastasia. "Deciphering diaspora–translating transnationalism: Family dynamics, identity constructions and the legacy of ‘home’ in second-generation Greek-American return migration." Ethnic and Racial Studies 29.6 (2006): 1040-1056. doi.org/10.1080/01419870600960297


 * Cinel, Dino. The National Integration of Italian Return Migration, 1870-1929 (Cambridge University Press, 1991).
 * Dashefsky, Arnold, et al. "Retention or Reemigration: Why They Remain or Return." in Americans Abroad: A Comparative Study of Emigrants from the United States (1992): 117-141.
 * Gilkey, George R. "The United States and Italy: migration and repatriation." Journal of Developing Areas 2.1 (1967): 23-36. online
 * Glynn, Irial. "Emigration Across the Atlantic: Irish, Italians and Swedes compared, 1800–1950" EGO: European History Online (6 June 2011) online
 * Gould, John D. "European inter-continental emigration. The road home: Return migration from the USA." Journal of European Economic History 9.1 (1980): 41-112. online; in-depth look at American statistics 1907-1914.
 * Grams, Grant W. Coming Home to the Third Reich: Return Migration of German Nationals from the United States and Canada, 1933-1941 (McFarland, 2021). online
 * Lorenzo-Hernández, José. "The Nuyorican's dilemma: Categorization of returning migrants in Puerto Rico." International Migration Review 33.4 (1999): 988-1013. online
 * Moltmann, Günter. "American-German return migration in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries." Central European History 13.4 (1980): 378-392.
 * Piore, Michael J. Birds of passage: Migrant Labor and Industrial Societies (Cambridge UP, 1980), covers US and Europe with focus on Mexicans in late 20th century USA.
 * Portes, Alejandro, and Rubén G. Rumbaut. Immigrant America : a portrait (4th ed. U of California Press, 2014).
 * Poznan, Kristina E. "Return Migration to Austria-Hungary from the United States in Homeland Economic and Ethnic Politics and International Diplomacy." Hungarian Historical Review 6.3 (2017): 647-667. online


 * Saloutos, Theodore. They Remember America: The Story of the Repatriated Greek-Americans (1950)


 * Shepperson, Wilbur. Emigration and Disenchantment: Portraits of Englishmen Repatriated from the United States (U of Oklahoma Press, 1965)
 * Tedebrand, Lars-Goran. "Remigration from America to Sweden," in Harald Runblom and Hans Norman, eds. From Sweden to America: A History of the Migration (1976) pp 201-27.
 * Ward, Zachary. "Birds of passage: Return migration, self-selection and immigration quotas." Explorations in Economic History 64 (2017): 37-52. online
 * Wyman, Mark. Round-trip to America: The immigrants return to Europe, 1880-1930 (Cornell University Press, 1993), a major scholarly study.
 * Wyman, Mark. "Emigrants returning: the evolution of a tradition." in Emigrant homecomings (Manchester UP, 2017). pp. 16-31; broad essay focused on returning from USA.

From Canada

 * Fong, Eric. "Return Migration from Canada to Hong Kong." China Review (2012): 25-43. online
 * Grams, Grant W. Coming Home to the Third Reich: Return Migration of German Nationals from the United States and Canada, 1933-1941 (McFarland, 2021). online
 * Richmond, H. A. "Return Migration from Canada to Britain," Population Studies 22#1 (1969): 263-271. online
 * Teo, Sin Yih. "‘The moon back home is brighter’?: Return migration and the cultural politics of belonging." Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 37.5 (2011): 805-820. Why return o China. doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2011.559720

Other countries

 * Blum, Douglas W. The social process of globalization: Return migration and cultural change in Kazakhstan (Cambridge University Press, 2016).
 * Klinthäll, Martin. "Refugee return migration: return migration from Sweden to Chile, Iran and Poland 1973–1996." Journal of Refugee Studies 20.4 (2007): 579-598.


 * Roopnarine, Lomarsh. "Return Migration of Indentured East Indians from the Caribbean to India 1838-1920." Journal of Caribbean History (2006_ 40#2: 308-324.

Scholarly Journals

 * International Migration
 * International Migration Review
 * Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
 * Migration Letters