“…In the last decade, there has been a growing interest from both policy and academic communities in the intentions to migrate, their determinants, and the eventual consequences. Social scientists provided conceptual frameworks to explain how migration decisions come about, by distinguishing between the aspirations to migrate, and the capabilities and opportunities to do so (de Haas, ; Carling and Schewel, ). More precisely, scholars have theorised that migration should be interpreted “as a basic response to perceived opportunity differentials” (Czaika and de Haas, , p. 424), combined with individual aspirations, and showed how the result of this interaction varies according to national and local context, but also households and individual characteristics.…”