The type of work depends on the migrant and the location. Many migrants find work on farms harvesting. But in big cities, you may just as well find them fixing automobiles, working in factories, or remodeling homes. I wouldn't be surprised if there weren't a few migrant doctors and lawyers too! All ranges of people cross the borders to find work, poor and rich, educated and not educated. So it all entirely depends on the migrant in question. Obviously, jobs requiring certification would be harder for a migrant to get, the doctor being a good example, since you must be certified to be a doctor. But it goes back to the original issue, is it depends on the migrant. Not all migrants are illegal. So technically, if a doctor from Pakistan wanted to work in the US, they might get a visa and all the proper paperwork to enter the country, and then travel here and become a doctor here, but you could still call them a migrant, since they weren't born here. In summary, migrant workers do a complete range of tasks from the everyday to the extraordinary, just like anyone else, it just depends on the migrant youre talking about.
Migrants are people or person who moves to a different country for maybe work or to live somewhere more warmer or a place with snow. Migrants are people who want a different live in a different place.
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Migrants uaually do any job that gets them money, for their stay and education, they work in hotels, petrol pumps and now in malls.
Interprovincial migrants move from venue to venue within a province to find work. Inter-provincial migrants, however, move between various provinces to find employment opportunities. Migrant jobs are usually seasonal or otherwise temporary in nature, so migrants need to move around to keep employed.
No. An immigrant is a person who moves from one country to a different country to live there permanently. A migrant is a person who moves from place to place to do seasonal work. There are some migrants who are also immigrants, but there are immigrants who are not migrants and there are migrants who are not immigrants.
Most Dust Bowl migrants headed west to states like California in search of work and better living conditions. They were drawn by the promise of opportunities in agriculture and other industries.
Remittances are funds transferred from migrants to their home country. They are the private savings of workers and families
Migrants don't move to new places, but generally follow crops for work. Immigrants come to a new place for freedom, safety, work, civil rights, and protection.
Migrants from Denmark are known as Danish nationality. Migrants from Dominica are known as Dominican nationality.
Mexicans can be maids, work in restraunt\food places, clearners and many more but they get paid very little because they are migrants and should not be in this country but they get paid 10 times then they got paid at home.
Immigrants or migrants move from where they are born to another land. They usually have to sign and work on agreement papers.
usually receive migrants from other parts of the country who come to work in the Federal District.