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Portuguese Journal of Social Science 21.1 is out now! Special Issue
Tuesday, May 28, 2024

Portuguese Journal of Social Science 21.1 is out now! Special Issue

Intellect is pleased to announce that Portuguese Journal of Social Science 21.1 is out now!

 

Special Issue: ‘Navigating the Complexity of International Migration’

 

This Special Issue aims to act as a guide through the evolving landscape of migration studies in Portugal. The articles contained within challenge conventional wisdom and offer fresh perspectives on social integration, migrant categories, race and ethnicity, power dynamics, and research methodologies.

 

For more information about the journal and issue click here>>

https://www.intellectbooks.com/portuguese-journal-of-social-science

 

Aims & Scope

 

Portuguese Journal of Social Science opens a gateway for the international community to engage with a high calibre of academic work in social sciences produced by Portuguese scholarship. Previous to the publication of this peer-reviewed journal, this work remained largely inaccessible to an international readership due to issues with language and translation.

 

This title is indexed with Scopus and the Web of Science’s Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI).

 

Issue 21.1

 

Editorial

 

Critically examining international migration

PEDRO GÓIS, NUNO OLIVEIRA AND SOFIA GASPAR

 

Special Section Articles

 

The integration of immigrants: Transitions between research, policy-making and statistical monitoring in the Portuguese case

CATARINA REIS DE OLIVEIRA

 

Citizenship, generational status and mixed origin: An analysis of immigrant heterogeneity on academic performance in Portuguese state schools

TERESA SEABRA AND ANA FILIPA CÂNDIDO

 

What is in the box? Problematizing racial categories and their institutionalization

NUNO OLIVEIRA

 

Mobility, precarity and productivity: The uncertain expansion and migration of science in Portugal

DAVID CAIRNS

 

General Issue Article

 

Acculturation strategies and adaptation outcomes of international retired migrants in Portugal

CHRISTIN-MELANIE VAUCLAIR AND DEBORAH DAHAB