|
|

This is only a preview of the paper Click here to register and get the full text. Existing members click here to login
|
|
|
When a family migrates, it is faced with a completely new life. ... Although a family can migrate voluntarily for many different reasons, apart from the changes it has to adapt to, it encounters several problems and it takes a long while (if ever) until the family can feel completely at home in a host country. However, there can also be very positive aspects affecting a family when it migrates (these are generally the pull factors). In a way, all of the factors, which affect families when they migrate, can be looked at as push and pull factors of the receiving country alone.
To start with, some changes a family has to adapt to, are things like the natural environment and the climate (that can be both positive and negative – such as extreme temperatures or natural disasters). ... Furthermore, good education facilities for children and job opportunities for parents, (which are generally pull factors for families when they migrate voluntarily) evidently affect the families in a positive way. ... Usually families who migrate voluntarily do not move to a very poor area unless it is because the parents have found a good job there.
Approximate Word count = 850 Approximate Pages = 3.4 (250 words per page double spaced)
|
|
|
|
|
|