“…Prior research in geography (Hägerstrand, 1957, Fotheringham, 1991, and more recently in network analysis, of internal (Maier and Vyborny, 2008) and international migration (Nogle, 1994, Davis et al, 2013, Tranos et al, 2012, Fagiolo and Mastrorillo, 2013 has examined extra-dyadic and meso-scale properties of migratory movements. Other studies have examined network properties of global migration in relation to global networks of short-term human mobility (Belyi et al, 2016), international trade (Fagiolo and Mastrorillo, 2014), and international flights and digital communication (Hristova et al, 2016). By integrating network and spatial considerations 1 in the context of globalization theories, we wish to extend past research through an examination of spatial network structures that emerge from multilateral and multiscale movements of people, the way these structures are shaped by relational, social, and spatial antecedents, and the way in which, in turn, they distinctively shape migration opportunities across the globe.…”