Foreign immigrants are mainly new immigrants from Romania. I have not had any more experience. In order to achieve the results, we must first find out why people are leaving and to achieve these reasons, we will focus on the Romanians' current life background, past families You have to stop looking at the situation and how their situation can be seen today. At the same time, the report deals with external immigrants from Romania through advisory reports, research and literature.
Immigrants are "complete social phenomena" that can be "read" as opportunities and problems in Romanian society level, history, present and future. Therefore, we are working on a very complicated phenomenon that affects the whole society. The information is inadequate due to the fact that overseas immigrants in Romania are new and unfamiliar.
The main influence of parents' immigrants to two groups of children: positive and negative effects, reports explain each group in detail
The negative impact of working abroad has been revealed from specialist elements on consular theory, national statistics and their own research, as well as reports from other agencies and large stakeholder reports.
Separation of children and separation from parents (deprivation of mothers and fathers)
Depending on the situation, parents going abroad and leaving their children in the country may take the form of child abuse.
A common experience with immigrant parents in Southeast Asia is that children left behind expect their mothers or fathers to join their families again. Normally, the length of the absence period is uncertain. Depending on the circumstances of the family, immigrants may renew short term (usually two years) contracts. Governments in this region are promoting temporary migration of temporary workers through agreements with foreign governments and staffing agencies. As Asis (2006) pointed out, the desire to go abroad in the Philippines has become a public obsession. Who goes, where to go, and when they leave, they are influenced by many factors.
Abstract This paper is exploring the influence of parents 'parents' abroad migration of workers left behind in the Philippines on immigrants themselves and their children. We have two data sources, a semistructured interview with parents who moved to Ireland in response to opportunities born in the Celtic era, and a semistructured interview with one or two elderly children in Manila Metropolitan Area I borrowed. Overseas parents respondents have nothing to do with each other, but everyone explains the impact of their parents' immigration to their families. Interviews with parents focused on their own experiences while interviewing the series of influences on the family as a whole. Background: In the Philippines, abroad migration of adult families is not new. In the United States, over the years since 1992, overseas Filipino workers (OFW) of newly adopted women outnumber men (www.poea.gov.ph) in most years.