Abstract (eng)
In the last years migrants have been increasingly conceptualised as new agents of development both in the academic debate around the migration- development nexus and in policies of co-development. It was recognized that migrants maintain transnational relations to their countries and communities of origin. These relations include financial remittances as well as flows of information, knowledge, values, ideas and practices, so called social remittances. It is expected that these flows may have an inherent potential for the reduction of poverty and social transformations in their countries of origin. So far, however, migrants have been perceived as a homogenous group, ignoring differences concerning formation, age or gender and the effects of these differences on the migrants' visions of development. This work tries to contribute to the debate around migration and development by shifting the focus on the perspective of the migrants. In a qualitative research, the visions of development of Ecuadorian migrants in Valencia will be studied and interpreted with respect to different recent approaches in order to show some possible consequences both for the academic debate about migration and development and for co-development policies.