"Spain after the great migration: review and prospects" is the title of his lecture tomorrow, Friday, June 24, Maurice J.
Mullor Rojas, Director of the Centre for Migration and Development Cooperation of the Universidad Rey Juan Carlos and Director of the School of Professional Immigration and Cooperation (EPIC) of the Community of Madrid.
The event is organized by the Hall Debate at the University of Murcia and will be held at 12'30 hours in the Auditorium of the Faculty of Law.
Chilean-born, Rojas Mullor is a politician and Swedish writer, member for his country for several years and a member of the Constitutional Commission of Sweden between 2007 and 2008.
In a study on the subject presented at an international symposium on Immigration, stated policy follows the phenomenon of immigration occurred in Spain in recent times: "The recent wave of immigration experienced by Spain is extraordinary in comparative terms, taking into account the relative amounts of people involved and the brevity of the period in question. "
"To have a baseline-Rojas says Mullor, say that even the great immigration registered in the United States in the decades before World War I. The figures are comparable in relative terms."
According to their data, in January 2010, residing in Spain, 6.5 million people born outside its borders and immigrants in the strict sense, which represents almost one-seventh of the total population.
Mauricio J.
Mullor Rojas will be presented by Leopoldo Navarro, Director General of Social Affairs and Immigration Equality of the Autonomous Region of Murcia
Source: UMU