[LCM Articles] INVESTIGATING MIGRATION: LERC
Nehme Lebbos
nehme.lebbos at iloubnan.info
Tue Oct 9 17:40:36 EDT 2007
INVESTIGATING MIGRATION: LERC
7 October 2007, by Jasmina Najjar
http://www.iloubnan.info/Investigating-Migration-LERC
LERC (Lebanese Emigration Research Center) at NDU recently released its
latest study on “Insecurity, Migration and Return Following The Summer
2006 War in Lebanon.” This was the second phase of a previous study that
focused on the Summer 2006 Evacuation. The full report is currently
posted on the European Union’s Consortium for Applied Research on
International Migration’s website (www.carim.org). The study focuses on
insecurity as a significant factor contributing towards ‘forced
migration’ and dissuading migrants to return to Lebanon. Economic,
societal and political insecurity were all defined and taken into
consideration. The study encompassed 460 Lebanese residents, 74
migrants, 19 experts, 2 embassies and two immigration services and
focused exclusively on the period after the Summer 2006 War. The survey
revealed that 60.5% want to emigrate while 39% said they had no wish to
emigrate. Of the migrants living abroad, 73.2% have no plans to return
to Lebanon in the next 5 years.
Guita Hourani (LERC’s Associate Director) and Dr. Eugene Richard
Sensenig-Dabbous (Assistant Professor and LERC’s Research Associate)
speak candidly to iLoubnan about LERC in general and their latest study.
They both uncover the main reasons such research caught their interest.
LERC was established 4 years ago. Migration has been around for 30 years
but they needed a pivotal starting point, like the overwhelming July
war, to provide an opportunity. Interest in Lebanon was low until the
assassination of Rafic Hariri, the Cedar Revolution and other events
which created a heightened interest in the country. LERC initially began
conducting a study on money being sent to Lebanon that was supposed to
be published last summer but the sudden war brought an abrupt halt to
this. So Hourani and Dr. Sensenig-Dabbous decided to take the initiative
of studying the evacuation even though they didn’t have funding. The
survey involved around 40 people who had been evacuation and placed an
emphasis on the human aspects of evacuation (the devastation,
psychological impact, feelings…) and had a brief summary of the
political situation before the war (a literature review). The evacuation
study was published in hard back in October 2006 and was sent to the
people who had wanted to fund the interrupted study on money sent to
Lebanon who hence offered to fund the study on Insecurity and Migration.
“Many love Lebanon but Lebanon is not providing them with security.”
The study on Insecurity and Migration was supposed to be based on a
sample of 800 participants, but the ‘war’ didn’t stop…as Hourani puts
it: “it shifted from a physical war to a political one in the form of
assignations, sit-ins….” The post war crisis is the cause of the high
emigration rates and the low return rates. The war was a trigger, but as
Dr. Sensenig-Dabbous states: “now it is a problem generated from within
the country and not from an external aggressor.” September 2006 was a
period of relief and a positive ‘let’s rebuild’ attitude but then in
October the tide started to change and problems set in. Dr.
Sensenig-Dabbous asserted: “If the political situation sorts itself out,
then the economic situation would sort itself out. Lebanon has the
potential to improve its economy.” And Hourani declared: “Many love
Lebanon but Lebanon is not providing them with security.”
Questionnaires were collected from the end of September until 11
December 2006. It is very interesting because indirect questions were
devised to ascertain gender factors. This revealed that women wanted to
emigrate because of the lack of physical security, whereas men
attributed their desire to leave to issues of financial security.
Studying migration’s relation to men is a far rarer practice than
focusing on women and migration…and migration studies on Lebanon are
also very rare. Between 1975 and 2001, only 2 studies were published
followed by no studies at all until LERC started its benchmark work.
Many young professionals and skilled workers are leaving the country
UNICEF has approached Hourani and the Goethe Institute has approached
Dr. Sensenig-Dabbous to study the youth brain drain that is currently
gripping Lebanon. Many young professionals and skilled workers are
leaving the country, hence creating a severe lack of qualified and
experienced people. Before, mainly young men where going to work abroad,
but now many women are following suit. Most companies in Lebanon are
finding it difficult to fill certain positions, for instance we now
frequently hear that an engineering firm couldn’t find a properly
qualified electrical engineer, or an architecture firm couldn’t find an
architect with 4 years of experience or an advertising agency couldn’t
find a decent art director or copywriter. Even finding a good
electrician or mechanic is much harder than it used to be. These render
this an issue of significant import. Hourani said: “The young want to
stay if they were hired on merit without nepotism and were provided with
more stability and opportunities.”
LERC has numerous plans in the pipeline. They are hoping to build a
database from the 1800s till the present called Project LEAD (Lebanese
Emigration Archive and Database). They also presented a white paper on
absentee voting and are active in generating interest towards this cause
despite the current political players’ lack of interest. But some
progress has been made because for the first time, stakeholders,
organizations, think tanks etc. all participated in presenting proposals
on how the Lebanese Diaspora can vote.
Jurassic Park
LERC are faced with an ever shifting situation with makes it
substantially difficult to deal with sensitive issues. It’s a tricky job
at times with some attempted studies having to be postponed or even
scrapped. For instance, LERC tried to do the first study in 30 years on
the Christians from villages in the South but encountered certain
set-backs and delays which forced them to leave the project unfinished.
As Dr. Sensenig-Dabbous said jokingly: “we call our center Jurassic Park
because at times we feel much like the scientists in the movie with the
dinosaurs they are trying to study, trying to eat them.” Funding is an
issue sometimes but getting the research data itself is a veritable
challenge. Conducting field work in Lebanon has always been difficult
and lately the random bombs are making things even more problematic. But
LERC is still trying to fulfill its mission without letting obstacles
put on damper on things. Migration is nothing new to Lebanon but
studying this matter with all its intricacies and changing factors sheds
light on the Lebanese experience and is a noteworthy endeavor. Hopefully
one day LERC will have the opportunity to study a massive influx of
people coming back to settle in Lebanon rather than the present harsh
reality of people dreaming of leaving…
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