At the labour levels, workers continue relocating because of labour demands, usually in developed countries, economic distress in their home countries, or a combination of both. In addition, families are increasingly becoming transnational with relatives living in more than one country, reuniting, visiting regularly, while maintaining a transnational network of communic ation (Faist, 2000). Transatlantic migration has also grown, as is the case of people of Bangladesh, India, and Pakistan going to Europe and the United States, or those of the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Guyana, and Jamaica moving to Europe and.