How emigration is actually lived - well, this depends on many factors: education, economic station, language, where one lands, and what support network is in place at the site of arrival.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
A great emigration necessarily implies unhappiness of some kind or other in the country that is deserted.
Emigration, forced or chosen, across national frontiers or from village to metropolis, is the quintessential experience of our time.
The best way to travel abroad is to live with the locals.
On the subject of emigration, it is not my intention to dwell at any length.
History is another country and might be full of fascinating incidents and places to go visit - but as a destination for emigration, it has some problems!
Emigration is no longer a solution; it's a defeat. People are risking death, drowning every day, but they're knocking on doors that are not open.
Emigration is always a difficulty.
I'm interested in people who find themselves in places, either of their choosing or not, and who are forced to decide how best to live there. That feeling of both citizenship and exile, of always being an expatriate - with all the attendant problems and complications and delight.
I'm always intrigued when you are travelling through a place and there is somebody who has lived there and done the same job for years.
Migration - whether emigration or return - at the micro level is an individual choice, and government both at the Centre and the states have role only to facilitate the decision of the individuals.