NEW STUDY ANALYSING CHANGING ROLES IN MIGRATION FINDS COLOMBIAN WOMEN IN SPAIN INVESTING IN WELL-BEING OF THEIR FAMILIES
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Department of Public Information • News and Media Division • New York |
NEW STUDY ANALYSING CHANGING ROLES IN MIGRATION FINDS COLOMBIAN WOMEN
IN SPAIN INVESTING IN WELL-BEING OF THEIR FAMILIES
SANTO DOMINGO, DOMINICAN REPUBLIC, 6 May (INSTRAW) -- The study Gender and Remittances: Colombian Migration from the Central Western Metropolitan Area (AMCO),prepared by the United Nations International Research and Training Institute for the Advancement of Women (UN-INSTRAW) and the International Organization for Migration (IOM), analyses the dynamics of migration from the Central-Western Metropolitan Area (AMCO) in Colombia to Spain, the flow of remittances sent and received by women and the impact of those remittances on the development of their communities of origin.
According to the study, the migratory flow from the AMCO Area (municipalities of Pereira, Dosquebradas and La Virginia) to Spain was highly feminized at its beginnings in the mid-1990s. New labour markets for migrants in Spain and the creation of regional and family networks of women migrants created the conditions to initiate the migratory process. Other non-economic reasons, such as gender inequalities in the country of origin or the need to escape from conflict (gender violence, forced displacement, widowhood, among others), were also cited as incentives for female migration.
Women’s migration generally results in leaving sons and daughters in the care of grandmothers and it is more likely that the family will be reunited in the destination country than that the migrant woman will return home. When the man migrates, he will more often find a new partner in the destination country and will no longer send remittances to his family in Colombia.
“Gender dynamics of transnational households show a gradual change in traditional roles. On the one hand, a progressive empowerment can be observed in women who migrate and become the main providers for their households, as well as in women who become the recipients of remittances in the country of origin. On the other hand, a notable participation on the part of men in childrearing and household tasks is evident in Colombian households, as well as in reunified households in Spain,” explained Mar Garcia, Researcher on Gender, Migration and Development at UN-INSTRAW.
Despite the fact that the causes for migration are occasionally different for men and women, both remit similar amounts. However, it must be emphasized that, because women’s salaries are notably lower, their remittances consume a greater proportion of their income than men’s. “54 per cent of remittances received in the AMCO region are sent by women. Women send money to their families in Colombia more continuously and more frequently than men. Women who remain in Colombia constitute 70.7 per cent of all remittance recipients, which shows a marked difference towards the female administration of remittances,” stated Jose Angel Oropeza, Head of Mission at IOM in Colombia.
The study also found that remittances sent by women tend to increase household investment (mainly in food and services). An important percentage of remittances is also assigned to educational and health expenses. As to other types of investment, it is observed that there is an interest in purchasing houses in Spain as well as in Colombia. This practice does not represent a productive initiative for recipient households in Colombia, but an increase in the household’s capital through savings.
In the case of female-headed households with male migrants, investment is drastically reduced and remittances finance basic necessities such as food. This is due to the fact that male migration is often motivated by the opportunity to allow women to leave their jobs and care for children.
The study combines the qualitative analysis of interviews with migrants, remittance recipients, key informants and representatives of associations, and was carried out by Alma Mater in the AMCO region and by UN-INSTRAW in Spain. The study also draws on statistical information compiled for another Study on International and Migration and Remittances in Colombia, which was carried out in 2004 by Alianza País, organized by OIM, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs through the Programme “Colombia Nos Une” (Colombia Unites Us), the National Administrative Department for Statistics (Departamento Administrativo Nacional de Estadísticas -- DANE), the National Central Bank, the Association of Exchange Institutions of Colombia (ASOCAMBIARIA), the Americas-Spain Association Solidarity and Cooperation (AESCO), the Network of Public Universities of the Coffee Region (Alma Mater) and the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA).
Colombia is one of the Latin American countries with the greatest flow of migrants. The appraisals made by DANE show that, during 2005, 3.3 million Colombians lived overseas, which is equivalent to 7.3 per cent of the country’s total population.
Read the complete study: http://www.un-instraw.org/es/downloads/final-reports/index.php.
Read the fact-sheet on remittances in Colombia: http://www.un-instraw.org/en/grd/country-brief/remittances-in-colombia.html.
Read the fact-sheet on Colombian migration to Spain: http://www.un-instraw.org/en/grd/country-brief/colombian-migration-to-spain-5.html.
About UN-INSTRAW
UN-INSTRAW is devoted to applied research, training and knowledge management in partnership with Governments, the United Nations agencies, civil society and academia to achieve gender equality and women’s empowerment.
About IOM
IOM is the leading intergovernmental organization in the field of migration, and works closely with governmental, intergovernmental and non-governmental partners.
Press contact: Valeria Vilardo, Communications Associate, UN-INSTRAW, tel.: +1 809 685 2111 ext. 227, e-mail: vvilardo@un-instraw.org.
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