Results

Ten Kate, R., Bilecen, B., and Steverink, N. (2021).
The Role of Parent-Child Relationships and Filial Expectations in Loneliness among Older Turkish Migrants. Social Inclusion, 9(4), 291–303. 

https://doi.org/10.17645/si.v9i4.4508

Bilecen, B. (2020).
Asymmetries in transnational social protection: Perspectives of Migrants and Nonmigrants. Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences,   689(1), 168–191.

https://doi.org/10.1177/0002716220922521

Naumann E., Brinkmann M.M., Mohring K. (2024).
The ethich penalty in welfare deservingness: A factorial survey experiemnt on welfare chauvinism in pension attitudes in Germany, Journal of European Social Policy, 0(0), 1-13.

hhttps://journals.sagepub.com/doi/epub/10.1177/09589287231222840

Bilecen, B. and Fokkema, T. (2022).
Conducting Empirical Research with Older Migrants: Methodological and Ethical Issues. The Gerontologist, 62(6), 809-815.

https://doi.org/10.1093/geront/gnac036

Bilecen, B. and Lubbers, M.J. (2021).
The Networked Character of Migration and Transnationalism. Global Networks, 21, 837–852.

https://doi.org/10.1111/glob.12317

Bilecen, B. and Vacca, R. (2021).
The isolation paradox: A comparative study of social support and health across migrant generations in the US. Social Science & Medicine, 283, 114204.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.114204

"Migration is networked. Individuals are embedded in plural social networks that influence the ways in which they mobilize resources, adjust to new circumstances, envisage their identities, and spend their lives. Social networks are particularly important during international migration when decisions about trajectories are taken and when ties, belongings, and attachments are (re)imagined and (re)negotiated. Migration, in turn, also affects networks. This is not only the case for migrants, but also for those who stay behind, whose lifeworlds also involve transnational dimensions through their connections with migrants. At an aggregate level, migration even alters the linkages between nation-states and their institutions"

Bilecen, B. and Lubbers, M.J. (2021: 837-838).