Search



  • Subscribe to our newsletter

    Email address


  • Archives

  • Tags

  • Newswatch Categories

  • Latest News

    « Previous Entries Next Entries »

    Never too late to emigrate?

    Wednesday, January 9th, 2008

    Here’s one for the record books: a 102-year-old man has decided to begin a new chapter in his life – by emigrating from England to New Zealand. Erik King-Turner has been married for twelve years to his New Zealand-born wife, Doris. The couple, who have been living in Hampshire, met when Doris was researching her family history in England.

    Mr King-Turner said his wife was getting homesick, and that he thought it might be “rather fun to move to New Zealand”, according to a report in the BBC.

    His wife added, “He’s very easy to get on with and he settles down very quickly, so I think he’ll quite enjoy it out there.”

    The couple began their sea journey to their new home last week.

    Read the full report in the BBC.

    December 18 is International Migrant’s Day

    Tuesday, December 18th, 2007

    Today is International Migrants Day, as designated by the UN. The date was choosen because it was on 18th December 1990 that the UN adopted the International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of all Migrants Workers and Members of Their Families.There are 37 countries that have ratified the convention on migrant workers’ rights. Ireland is not among them; few European countries are.

    Visit the official International Migrant’s Day site.

    See more information on the UN Migrant Workers’ Convention.

    Exhibition on Irish in Europe opens

    Friday, December 14th, 2007

    “Strangers to Citizens: the Irish in Europe, 1600 – 1800” has opened at the National Library’s Genealogical Office on Kildare Street in Dublin.

    The exhibition tells the story of the Irish who went to continental Europe from the time of the Flight of the Earls. It shows that the Irish left for a variety of reasons and had a myriad of experiences:

    Following the wars at the end of the 16th century, the Irish began to migrate to continental Europe in a pattern which continued over two hundred years. Soldiers, students, priests, professionals, and merchants, were among the many thousands who emigrated, to Spain, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Russia, and Sweden, and elsewhere. Over time migrants formed communities and eventually integrated into their host societies.

    The exhibition features a number of images from institutions across the Continent, as well as original manuscripts illuminating the Irish experience. Digital installations allow visitors to explore topics in greater depth and also to look up individuals who served in the French and Spanish armies of the 18th century and who studied at Irish colleges in Paris, Leuven, or Toulouse.

    The exhibition, which celebrates the 400th anniversary of the Flight of the Earls, will be open throughout 2008. Admission is free.

    See the National Library website.

    No recognition for gay couples a barrier to return

    Tuesday, December 11th, 2007

    An agency that works with gay and lesbian people says that the lack of recognition for gay couples is preventing many gay emigrants from returning home.

    A report in the Irish Independent says,

    The Gay Lesbian Equality Network (GLEN) said the issue of foreign partners of Irish nationals not being allowed to live or work here is their biggest problem area.

    Spokesman Eoin Collins said the number of calls to the organisation on the issue in the past two years has doubled.

    “Irish people who have a partner from outside the EU, such as Canada or the US, are having huge problems,” he said…

    “It’s definitely turning people off returning to Ireland. They fear that if they do return, that their partners’ status will cause tension in the relationship.”

    While the Government has ruled out gay marriage, it says it will introduce a bill establishing civil partnerships for gay couples next year.

    See the full report in the Irish Independent.

    See the GLEN website.

    Irish/US abductions the highest rate in world?

    Tuesday, December 4th, 2007

    The London Times has reported that international child abduction between Ireland and the US is a bigger problem than anywhere else in the world. The fact is reported as a small mention in an article on international abductions, “After the breakup, the kidnap”. The article discusses the difficulties faced by parents who split up and see their children taken out of the country by their partners, often emigrants who are returning home. It says the problem is increasing due to the increasing migration, international marriage and divorce.

    Journalist Carol Midgley suggests the high level of intermarriage between the US and Irish citizens is responsible for the levels of Irish/US abductions:

    The highest level of child abduction/return is between the US and Ireland, because of the number of marriages between Irish and American people. The problem is so pronounced that the two countries have a child abduction pact.

    I will try to find more information on this – it seems to cry out for more verification and explanation. It also raises the question of how many of those couples might be both Irish and one wants to return home while the other doesn’t.

    Read the whole article on the London times website.

    See information from the Irish Centre for Parentally Abducted Children on the Citizens Information Database.

    Alerted via IrishEagle.com

    Irish Times carries report on Ean seminar

    Monday, December 3rd, 2007

    The Irish Times has published a report by migration correspondent Ruadhan Mac Cormaic on Ean’s AGM and seminar, which was held on Saturday. The text is as follows:

    Emigrant group calls for stronger ties with diaspora Ireland must develop ties with its diaspora that are driven by more than labour market needs, a conference has heard.

    Fr Alan Hilliard, chairman of the Emigrant Advice Network, told the organisation’s agm on Saturday that many states were realising their diaspora’s political and monetary power.

    “If Ireland is to be a leader in this area, we have a lot more work to do,” he said. “We have allowed circumstance to attract people back rather than actively strategise the involvement of people in their homeland.” Part of the problem was that, as with migration issues generally, the debate was too “labour-focused.”

    On the Unit for the Irish Abroad, a section of the Department of Foreign Affairs set up in 2004, Fr Hilliard expressed concern it “might be reduced to a bank teller with a purely monetary role dolling out money for anything ‘Oirish’ that coincides with visits of dignitaries or finds itself supporting some nice ideas that may have a business interest in the background.”

    With the collapse of comprehensive immigration reform in the US earlier this year, Fr Hilliard suggested the focus of the campaign on behalf of the undocumented Irish there should change. “Maybe we need not work the corridors of power in the US but engage in a campaign to educate people about the reality of our undocumented Irish in the United States.

    “The latest squall stimulated by Trina Vargo shows the need to have further mature discussion on this matter. Time can be spent arguing or time can be used more productively educating those that are in need of enlightened education programmes that dispel myths. You cannot change political process and outcomes if you ignore the mindset of the people who actually vote,” he said.

    Fr Hilliard, who is also director of the Irish Episcopal Commission for Emigrants, warned that there were dangers in the growing preference for temporary worker programmes.

    “Again, the focus here is on the labour market and not on the migrants. Surely as a country . . . that has a long history of dealing with emigration, we need to highlight the inadequacy of such theories. Our work with emigrants in need reveals that when ‘temporary’ is put alongside ‘migrant worker’, there are catastrophic consequences. Indeed, any talk of integration in countries where these conditions are present is shallow talk.”

    A recent report by Goodbody’s Economic Consultants on emigrant services stated that funding grew from €3.1 million for 73 groups in 2003 to €11.6 million for 184 groups in 2006.

    © 2007 The Irish Times

     See the article on the Irish Times website.

    « Previous Entries Next Entries »