Argentina
No. 49624 Ecuador and Argentina
Agreement by exchange of notes for the establishment of a Permanent Commission for Political Coordination and Promotion of Argentine-Ecuadorian Integration between the Republic of Ecuador and the Argentine Republic. Quito 18 May 1990
No. 49398 Argentina and Venezuela (Bolivarian Republic of)
Cooperation Agreement on the promotion of commerce and the transfer of technology in the field of international trade between the Argentine Republic and the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela. Caracas 1 December 2011
No. 49405. European Community and Argentina
Agreement for scientific and technological cooperation between the European Community and the Argentine Republic (with annex). Brussels 20 September 1999
No. 50248. Argentina and Lao People’s Democratic Republic
Agreement on technical co-operation between the Government of the Argentine Republic and the Government of the Lao People’s Democratic Republic. Buenos Aires 26 August 2011
No. 48843. Argentina and Cuba
No. 48845. Argentina and United States of America
No. 48885. Argentina and Venezuela (Bolivarian Republic of)
No. 48879. Argentina and Peru
No. 48841. Argentina and Peru
No. 48672. Argentina and Chile
No. 48868. Argentina and Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meeting
No. 48884. Argentina and Portugal
No. 48872. Argentina and Japan
No. 48904. Argentina and Bulgaria
No. 48659. Argentina and Brazil
Child Migrants with and without Parents
This paper studies child migration in Argentina Chile and South Africa. It defines child migrants as under 18 year olds whose usual residence was in a different country or province five years prior to census. The paper estimates the scale of child migration; compares relative magnitudes of internal and international migration; and considers sensitivity to alternative definitions of migration. Second it examines family structures within which migrant children live at destinations defining children who are co-resident with adult parents and siblings as dependent and those outside of these close family members as independent. Third the internal/international and in/dependent distinctions are analysed jointly to describe some social-economic characteristics of the four sub-groups of migrant children.