Joseph, JolinNarendran, VishnuRajan, S. Irudaya2014-03-042014-03-042013-05http://hdl.handle.net/10625/52463A study commissioned by the International Institute of Social Studies, The Hague (Erasmus University Rotterdam), within the project on ‘Migration, Gender and Social Justice’The table of contents for this item can be shared with the requester. The requester may then choose one chapter, up to 10% of the item, as per the Fair Dealing provision of the Canadian Copyright ActThrough analysis of the Bangladesh-India migration corridor, the paper attempts to explore nuances in South-South migration flows and suggests a shift from simplistic analysis towards a framework that adequately considers regional complexities. As evidenced by the overall academic and policy preoccupation with South-North migration, recent policies have almost exclusively concentrated on North-South remittances. Poor data on South-South labour movements, coupled with scarcity of systematic research, impedes the formulation of policies that can effectively use this intra-regional labour mobility as an enabler for structural transformation, growth, poverty reduction and rural development in the developing world.1 digital file (39 p.)application/pdfenMIGRATIONSOUTH-SOUTH RELATIONSBANGLADESHINDIAVULNERABLE GROUPSMIGRATION POLICYSOCIAL SAFETY NETSSOCIAL JUSTICEMIGRANT WORKERSSOUTH ASIAEVIDENCE-BASED PLANNINGRESEARCH NEEDSSOCIAL WELFARENeither here nor there : an overview of South-South migration from both sides of the Bangladesh-India migration corridorIDRC-Related Report