Figures
- 1Asset/vulnerability approach applied in international migration 62
- 2The migration-society-reproduction relationship from three levels of analysis 76
- 3The three components of the Reproduction Model 99
- 4Population pyramid, selected receiving countries 111
- 5Ageing Index in selected receiving countries 112
- 6Total Fertility Rate. Selected receiving countries 115
- 7Latin America, 1950–2100. Demographic Dependency Ratio and Demographic Dividend 118
- 8Latin America, 2000–2010. Export of Demographic Bonus by country of origin migration rate of working age population (%) 122
- 9International migration and global regime of demographic reproduction 124
- 10Latin America, 1950–2100. Working age population growth (thousands) 125
- 11USA, 1970–2060. Population by ethnic origin (millions of people) 127
- 12USA, 2012 and 2060. Population pyramid, whites and Latino population 128
- 13Arizona, California, Florida, Nevada, New Mexico and Texas. Population by ethnic groups, and population pyramid 131
- 14Labor migration and reproduction of capital 140
- 15USA, 2016. Third World immigrants by major industry groups 147
- 16Spain and United States. Labor force deficit 149
- 17Global flow of remittances (billion US dollars) 157
- 18Remittances by receiving country (%) 158
- 19USA and Europe (15 countries). Employment growth and occupational polarization 177
- 20United States of America. Ethnic composition of occupational strata 181
- 21California, Texas, Florida, Arizona, Nevada and New Mexico, 2016. Ethnic composition of occupational strata 183
- 22United States of America and selected states. Ethnic composition of population by income strata, 2016 184
- 23United States of America, 2016. Employment of Latinos (migrants and natives) in selected personal services (%) 187
- 24International migration and social reproduction in global society 192
- 25The centrality of international migration in advanced societies 205
- 26California, 1900–2015. Population by major ethnic group 216
- 27USA, 1980–2060. Population pyramid, white non-Latino and Latinos 219
- 28USA. 2002–2015. Labor force deficit (millions of people) 221
- 29USA, 2000–2015. Growth of gdp by ethnic origin of labor force 222