Migration, immigration and emigration Books
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Handbook on Transnationalism
Book SynopsisProviding a critical overview of transnationalism as a concept, this Handbook looks at its growing influence in an era of high-speed, globalised interconnectivity. It offers crucial insights on how approaches to transnationalism have altered how we think about social life from the family to the nation-state, whilst also challenging the predominance of methodologically nationalist analyses. Encompassing research from around the world, leading international researchers examine transnational migration, culture, state practices, organisations and institutions. Chapters draw attention to conceptual concerns around the topic, including the spatiality and temporality of transnationalism, connections to the life course, and the articulation of affect and emotion across borders. The Handbook further explains the transnational dimensions of different forms of migration, including labour migrations and student mobilities, and emphasises why and how transnational networks and circulations matter. An engaging foundation for students and scholars seeking to enhance their understanding of transnationalism, this Handbook offers agenda-setting arguments that will be beneficial to researchers of migration and mobilities, human geography, sociology, anthropology, international relations and cultural studies. It will also be an interesting read for practitioners working in migration, migrant rights and transnational organising and activism.Trade Review‘In this rich compendium, Yeoh and Collins bring together leading scholars of transnationalism to look afresh at this important topic. Exploring both new empirical cases and new concepts, the authors provide novel insights into transnational relations and processes. This is a must-read book for those interested in cross-border interactions in the contemporary era.’ -- Katharyne Mitchell, University of California, Santa Cruz, US‘Since the turn of the millennium, transnationalism has gradually taken its place as a key concept in social science. This welcome new Handbook provides fresh overviews alongside critical advances concerning a range of ever-salient, if not increasingly significant, theoretical understandings of transformative cross-border phenomena.’ -- Steven Vertovec, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Germany‘An up-to-date, invaluable mapping of the causes and consequences of social life across borders. The contributions to this volume go far beyond mobility and migration. They use a transnational lens to understand a range of institutions, processes, and relationships that have not been brought together before, including youth, labor unions, urbanization, and emotions. By doing so, they challenge fundamental assumptions about how identity, community, governance, and rights actually work in this early part of the twenty-first century. Theoretically rich and carefully argued, this Handbook is a welcome synthesis of this ever-more-present, dynamic understanding of social relations.’ -- Peggy Levitt, Wellesley College, US‘This is an invaluable collection of voices from the field of transnationalism research. The volume offers a rich new lexicon based on innovative case studies that will set the agenda for conceptualising transnationalism in years to come.’ -- Parvati Raghuram, The Open University, UKTable of ContentsContents: 1 Introduction to Handbook on Transnationalism 1 Brenda S.A. Yeoh and Francis L. Collins PART I CONCEPTUALISING TRANSNATIONALISM 2 Pre-national transnationalism and translocalism 30 David Featherstone 3 What, when and how transnationalism matters: a multi-scalar framework 45 Biao Xiang 4 Transnationalism and time: beyond the self, unity and relation 60 Sergei Shubin 5 Transnational ageing and the later life course 77 Vincent Horn 6 Transnationalism, affect and emotion 93 Raelene Wilding and Loretta Baldassar 7 Understanding variation and change in migrant transnationalism 110 Jørgen Carling PART II VARIETIES OF TRANSNATIONALISM 8 Transnational state practices and authoritarian politics 128 Gerasimos Tsourapas 9 Transnational migration and homemaking 141 Paolo Boccagni 10 Transnational organisations 155 Ludger Pries and Rafael Bohlen 11 The politics of transnational activism 169 Michele Ford 12 Transnational families in an age of migration 182 Brenda S.A. Yeoh, Theodora Lam and Shirlena Huang 13 Transnational young people: growing up and being active in a transnational social field 198 Valentina Mazzucato and Joan van Geel 14 Transnational urbanism in the South 211 Arnisson A.C. Ortega and Evangeline O. Katigbak 15 Transnational higher education 230 Johanna Waters and Maggi W.H. Leung 16 Transnational popular culture 246 Youna Kim 17 Transnational religion 262 Dominic Pasura PART III TRANSNATIONAL MIGRATIONS 18 Transnationalism and temporary labour migration 277 Matt Withers and Nicola Piper 19 International students as transnational migrants 294 Gracia Liu-Farrer 20 Transnational marriage migration in Asia and its friction 310 Juan Zhang 21 Transnational mobilities and return migration 325 Anastasia Christou and Brenda S.A. Yeoh 22 Connecting more than the origin and destination: multinational migrations and transnational ties 340 Anju M. Paul PART IV TRANSNATIONAL NETWORKS AND CIRCULATIONS 23 Migrant transnationalism, remittances and development 356 Marta Bivand Erdal 24 Communications technologies and transnational networks 371 Jolynna Sinanan and Heather A. Horst 25 Transnationalism and care circulation: mobility, caregiving, and the technologies that shape them 388 Loretta Baldassar and Raelene Wilding 26 Ethnic entrepreneurship and its transnational linkages 404 Jacob R. Thomas and Min Zhou 27 Elite transnational networks, spaces and lifestyles 420 Sin Yee Koh Index
£172.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Handbook of Migration and Global Justice
Book SynopsisThis timely Handbook brings together leading international scholars from a range of disciplinary backgrounds and geopolitical perspectives to interrogate the intersections between migration and global justice. It explores how cross-border mobility and migration have been affected by rapid economic, cultural and technological globalisation, addressing the pressing questions of global justice that arise as governments respond to unprecedented levels of global migration. Chapters analyse the key issues arising from tensions between international and national priorities, duties and laws, as well as visions for human coexistence and harmony. Featuring chapters written by researchers, political activists and contributors with lived experience of migration injustice, the Handbook explores central topics including failures in refugee protection, worker exploitation and violence against migrants. Looking ahead, it also discusses possible pathways to achieve global justice in and through migration, in terms of geopolitics, subjective experience, human rights and redistributive justice, global solidarity and political activism. Combining empirical case studies with cutting-edge theory, this Handbook will be an invaluable resource for scholars and students of migration, human rights and public policy. The application of the global justice concept to issues of migration and border control will also be useful for policy makers, practitioners and NGOs in these areas.Trade Review‘This volume will be a valuable source for all scholars and students who are interested in the global and local manifestations of justice projects within the context of migration and mobility. Not only does it outline the complexity of actors, processes, conditions, and subjectivities within multiple arenas of migration-related justice claims, but it also focuses critical attention on the nexus between global justice and multiple interwoven facets of securitization, racialization, and marginalization.’ -- Anna Amelina, Miriam Friz Trzeciak, Ethnic and Racial Studies‘Handbook of Migration and Global Justice is an invaluable addition to college and university library Social Issues collections, worthy of the highest recommendation.’ -- James A Cox, Midwest Book Review‘Handbook of Migration and Global Justice brings together an impressive assemblage of migration scholars to analyze how nation-states have transformed immigration into crises that call forth intensified protection of both state boundaries and national identities. Truly global in scope, and firmly grounded in the political economy of labour and the politics of human rights, this book offers new insights into the subterranean forces and structural arrangements animating the largest human migration in history, as well as the ineffectual and routinely inhumane responses many destination nations have mobilized to thwart human needs for mobility. It is a must read for those interested in the cutting-edge of migration scholarship.’ -- Raymond J. Michalowski, Northern Arizona University, US'This is an important book that brings together normative and empirical considerations about the intersections of migration with global justice - and of migrants as workers and as carriers of rights. This Handbook is particularly timely in the light of the pandemic crisis which has highlighted the many contradictions involved between the global migration regime and migrants’ rights. A must-have for researchers and students.' -- Anna Triandafyllidou, Toronto Metropolitan University, CanadaTable of ContentsContents: 1 Introduction: migration and global justice 1 Leanne Weber and Claudia Tazreiter PART I MIGRANT WORKERS AS GLOBAL LABOUR 2 The geopolitics of labour 14 Sandro Mezzadra and Brett Neilson 3 Temporary labour and worker exploitation: Southeast Asian migration to Malaysia 26 Immanuel Ness 4 Borders and migrant domestic workers 49 Maggy Lee 5 Heterogeneous borders: migrant workers in Northern Chile 65 Romina Ramos-Rodríguez, Roberto Dufraix-Tapia and José A. Brandariz PART II FAILURES IN REFUGEE PROTECTION 6 Contested global social justice: social services for migrants without international protection 83 Sieglinde Rosenberger and Theresa Schütze 7 Against the best interests of the child: the global injustice of migrant externalization 99 Vasileia Digidiki and Jacqueline Bhabha 8 Silent deaths: creative resistance 118 Omid Tofighian 9 Refugees, Europe, death 137 Marina Gržinić 10 Feminicide, state-perpetrated violence and economic violence: an analysis of the perverse reality driving Central American women’s migration 155 Amarela Varela Huerta PART III NON-CITIZENS, RIGHTS AND BELONGING 11 Justice for those without rights: ‘illegal’ migrants and marginalized citizens in India 172 Rimple Mehta 12 Immigration workplace raids and the politics of cruelty: the case of Postville, Iowa 186 Peter Kivisto 13 Racialized citizenship: challenging the Australian imaginary 201 Rachel Sharples and Linda Briskman 14 From rights to risk: labour migration and the securitization of justice 221 Lisa M. Simeone and Nicola Piper PART IV ACHIEVING GLOBAL JUSTICE IN/THROUGH MIGRATION 15 Global justice and the governance of transnational migration 240 David Owen 16 They went to sea in a SIEV, they did: a new framework of rights for missing and deceased migrants and their bereaved families proposed by the Last Rights Project 256 Syd Bolton and Catriona Jarvis 17 ‘Doing something for the future’: building relationships and hope through refugee and asylum seeker advocacy in Australia 278 Caroline Fleay, Mary Anne Kenny, Atefeh Andaveh, Salem Askari, Rohullah Hassani, Kate Leaney and Teresa Lee 18 Challenging the borders of difference and inequality: power in migration as a social movement for global justice 295 Nancy A. Wonders and Lynn C. Jones Index
£174.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Advanced Introduction to Migration Studies
Book SynopsisElgar Advanced Introductions are stimulating and thoughtful introductions to major fields in the social sciences, business and law, expertly written by the world’s leading scholars. Designed to be accessible yet rigorous, they offer concise and lucid surveys of the substantive and policy issues associated with discrete subject areas. Providing a timely overview of the main issues and scholarship in migration studies, Ronald Skeldon examines the principal methods of migration and offers in-depth guidance on trends and types of population movements in today’s world. Key areas such as forced movements and refugees are considered, alongside more voluntary migration and the relationship between migration and development. The main approaches to migration policy are also reviewed. Key features include: a broad interdisciplinary approach to migration studies consideration of both internal and international migration a fresh look at future migration challenges a substantial review of the literature. This insightful Advanced Introduction will be an excellent resource for both graduates and undergraduates studying migration. It will also be a useful guide for researchers in government departments, international agencies and think tanks who are actively engaged in work on migration.Trade Review‘This first comprehensive overview of migration studies summarizes research about international and internal, voluntary and forced migrations across the world’s more and less developed regions. The book explains concisely the field’s data, concepts, and theories, as refined since the 19th century, and its contributions to contemporary public policies that enhance benefits and minimize disruptions from population movements. Drawing on five decades as a migrant, researcher, teacher, and policy advisor, the author provides essential guidance to future research and policy making.’ -- Josh DeWind, Program Director, Social Science Research Council, 1994-2020, New York, US‘Drawing from different disciplines and guided by a geographical approach, Prof. Skeldon draws on a lifetime of work on internal and international migration to provide a clear and concise introduction to the field of migration without skirting the thorny issues. The book invites students to think critically and delve into different methodologies and scales of analysis to develop their own critical understanding of migration.’ -- Valentina Mazzucato, Maastricht University, the Netherlands‘This book synthesizes a lifetime of insights into international migration by one of its leading interpreters. Skeldon sketches the contours of why people move, how states attempt to control them, and the social consequences of mobility. Few other scholars dare to write at this global scale, link past and present, and cut across academic disciplines - all while maintaining the humility to point out what we don’t know and the challenges of knowing it.’ -- David Scott FitzGerald, University of California San Diego, USTable of ContentsContents: Preface 1. Introduction to migration studies 2. Migration measured 3. Migration described 4. Migration conceptualized: the socio-economic context 5. Migration constrained: the political context 6. Developmental migration 7. Migration managed 8. Migration futures 9. Migration studies: a way forward Afterword and acknowledgements References Index
£98.67
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Advanced Introduction to Migration Studies
Book SynopsisElgar Advanced Introductions are stimulating and thoughtful introductions to major fields in the social sciences, business and law, expertly written by the world’s leading scholars. Designed to be accessible yet rigorous, they offer concise and lucid surveys of the substantive and policy issues associated with discrete subject areas. Providing a timely overview of the main issues and scholarship in migration studies, Ronald Skeldon examines the principal methods of migration and offers in-depth guidance on trends and types of population movements in today’s world. Key areas such as forced movements and refugees are considered, alongside more voluntary migration and the relationship between migration and development. The main approaches to migration policy are also reviewed. Key features include: a broad interdisciplinary approach to migration studies consideration of both internal and international migration a fresh look at future migration challenges a substantial review of the literature. This insightful Advanced Introduction will be an excellent resource for both graduates and undergraduates studying migration. It will also be a useful guide for researchers in government departments, international agencies and think tanks who are actively engaged in work on migration.Trade Review‘This first comprehensive overview of migration studies summarizes research about international and internal, voluntary and forced migrations across the world’s more and less developed regions. The book explains concisely the field’s data, concepts, and theories, as refined since the 19th century, and its contributions to contemporary public policies that enhance benefits and minimize disruptions from population movements. Drawing on five decades as a migrant, researcher, teacher, and policy advisor, the author provides essential guidance to future research and policy making.’ -- Josh DeWind, Program Director, Social Science Research Council, 1994-2020, New York, US‘Drawing from different disciplines and guided by a geographical approach, Prof. Skeldon draws on a lifetime of work on internal and international migration to provide a clear and concise introduction to the field of migration without skirting the thorny issues. The book invites students to think critically and delve into different methodologies and scales of analysis to develop their own critical understanding of migration.’ -- Valentina Mazzucato, Maastricht University, the Netherlands‘This book synthesizes a lifetime of insights into international migration by one of its leading interpreters. Skeldon sketches the contours of why people move, how states attempt to control them, and the social consequences of mobility. Few other scholars dare to write at this global scale, link past and present, and cut across academic disciplines - all while maintaining the humility to point out what we don’t know and the challenges of knowing it.’ -- David Scott FitzGerald, University of California San Diego, USTable of ContentsContents: Preface 1. Introduction to migration studies 2. Migration measured 3. Migration described 4. Migration conceptualized: the socio-economic context 5. Migration constrained: the political context 6. Developmental migration 7. Migration managed 8. Migration futures 9. Migration studies: a way forward Afterword and acknowledgements References Index
£19.95
Edward Elgar Publishing Handbook on Migration and Development
Book Synopsis
£220.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Research Handbook on the Institutions of Global
Book SynopsisDrawing together the work of leading researchers from various disciplines and backgrounds, this illuminating Research Handbook contributes to a revitalised understanding of migration governance. It introduces novel debates regarding how actors and institutions shape significant migration dynamics. This erudite Research Handbook features a systematic review of the analytical framework of global migration governance. Chapters identify and explain key institutions involved in global migration, focusing on changes in patterns and actor behaviours. Key actors explored in the Research Handbook include international organisations, migrant networks, civil society groups, smuggling cartels, religious transnational organisations, security firms and trade unions. Ultimately, it aims to contribute to a renewed understanding of migration drivers and proceedings. Students and advanced scholars of international relations and politics studying topics such as migration policy will find this thorough Research Handbook to be incredibly valuable. Experts and agents of international and non-government organisations will additionally find it to be beneficial.Trade Review‘This anthology on the institutions of global migration governance is unprecedented in its scope. The editors have created a one-stop resource for scholars, students, and practitioners.’ -- David Scott FitzGerald, University of California San Diego, US‘The editors of this volume have brought together a formidable set of writers in this field for a collective, comprehensive and critical look at how migration governance plays out on the world stage.’ -- Nicholas Van Hear, University of Oxford, UK‘From interpersonal networks to global compacts, Pécoud and Thiollet’s Research Handbook on the Institutions of Global Migration Governance offers the first authoritative, comprehensive, multi-level assessment of the institutional field within which the 21st century’s international migrants move, expertly filling a longstanding yet critical gap in the migration literature.’ -- Douglas S. Massey, Princeton University, US‘This book is an invaluable resource for scholars working on migration. By bringing together state-of-the-art research by eminent international scholars, by looking at a range of different types of movements, and by including sub-national and supra-national institutions, as well as national ones, Pécoud and Thiollet have produced a must-go-to guide to the intricacies and challenges of migration governance.’ -- Peggy Levitt, Wellesley College, USTable of ContentsContents: 1 Introduction: the institutions of global migration governance 1 Antoine Pécoud and Hélène Thiollet PART I INTERGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS: THE AMBIGUITIES OF MULTILATERAL MIGRATION GOVERNANCE 2 Bringing about the ‘perfect storm’ in migration governance? A history of the International Organization for Migration 19 Elaine Lebon-McGregor 3 Managing migration by encompassing the role of the state: the IOM and the Migration Governance Framework 34 Younes Ahouga 4 UNHCR and the transformation of global refugee governance: the case of refugee resettlement 50 Adèle Garnier 5 The global governance of labour mobility: the role of the International Labour Organization 63 Nicola Piper 6 The migration and development nexus and international migration management: the role of the United Nations Development Programme 76 Giulia Breda 7 A humanitarian agency in global migration governance: the International Committee of the Red Cross’s migration policy and practice 89 Miriam Bradley 8 Regions and regional organisations in global migration governance 102 Ine Lietaert and Antoine Pécoud PART II INTERSECTIONS, CONVERSATIONS AND ARRANGEMENTS IN GLOBAL MIGRATION GOVERNANCE 9 The emergence of a global migration policy conversation: a retrospective on two mandates of the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Migrants (2011–2017) 119 François Crépeau and Anna Purkey 10 Global encounters: exploring the political foundations of global migration governance 132 Stefan Rother, Hélène Thiollet and Catherine Wihtol de Wenden 11 Making a global compact: the objectives and institutions of the Marrakesh Compact 146 Elspeth Guild and Kathryn Allinson 12 ‘Workers of the world unite’: unions and immigration, a global history 170 Leo Lucassen 13 At the crossroads of climate and migration governance: institutional arrangements to address climate-induced migration 186 François Gemenne 14 The gendered governance of migration 196 Laura Foley 15 The governance of migrant smuggling and human trafficking: institutions and networks 214 Anna Triandafyllidou and Letizia Palumbo 16 Global migration governance: positionality, agency and impact of civil society 227 Carl-Ulrik Schierup, Raúl Delgado Wise and Aleksandra Ålund PART III FIFTY SHADES OF GOVERNANCE: FROM PUBLIC TO PRIVATE, FROM FORMAL TO INFORMAL 17 Detention camps for foreigners and international agreements: two institutions that shaped European migration history (1945–2020) 250 Olivier Clochard 18 Economic interests and EU border and migration control: from security hindrances to market opportunities 263 Damien Simonneau 19 Migration and religious institutions: (re) arranging itineraries and imaginaries 279 Sophie Bava 20 The role of Church organisations in global migration governance 297 Mélodie Beaujeu 21 The governance of transnational care chains 312 Rianne Mahon 22 Promoting and restricting marriage migrations: when marriages are not such a private matter 327 Hélène Le Bail 23 Migration intermediation: revisiting the kafala (sponsorship system) in the Gulf 341 Claire Beaugrand and Hélène Thiollet 24 The global ordering of remittance flows: formalisation, facilitation, funnelling and financialisation 357 Anna Lindley 25 From a de facto to a de jure role of local authorities in the governance of international migration 377 Thomas Lacroix 26 ‘I know, therefore I (don’t) go’: the role of information in migration decision-making and irregular migration governance 387 Julia van Dessel 27 Is network embeddedness really worth it? Migrant networks as structures of both opportunities and constraints 406 Flore Gubert Index
£200.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Handbook on Migration and the Family
Book SynopsisThis Handbook is a timely and critical intervention into debates on changing family dynamics in the face of globalization, population migration and uneven mobilities. By capturing the diversity of family ‘types’, ‘arrangements’ and ‘strategies’ across a global setting, the volume highlights how migration is inextricably linked to complex familial relationships, often in supportive and nurturing ways, but also violent and oppressive at other times.Featuring state-of-the-art reviews from leading scholars, the Handbook attends to cross-cutting themes such as gender relations, intergenerational relationships, social inequalities and social mobility. The chapters cover a wide range of subjects, from forced migration and displacement, to expatriatism, labour migration, transnational marriage, education, LGBTQI families, digital technology and mobility regimes.By highlighting the complexity of the migration-family nexus, this Handbook will be a valuable resource for researchers, scholars and students in the fields of human geography, sociology, anthropology and social policy. Policymakers and practitioners working on family relations and gender policy will also benefit from reading this Handbook.Trade Review‘The past few decades have witnessed important theoretical advances to previous understandings of how families weather and are central to engagement in global migration processes. At the same time, the world has changed in fundamental ways, including the introduction of new communication technologies and increasingly bifurcated possibilities for mobility between those with and without social and financial capital. Taking these changes as their starting point, the chapters in this handbook provide important insight for understanding contemporary transnational family life. Covering topics ranging from intimacy and home-making to professional and educational migratory flows to left-behind youth and temporalities and the life-cycle, this comprehensive volume highlights key intersections to pay attention to and continue exploring in order to better understand the complex social processes involved at the intersection of family life and global mobility regimes.’ -- Nicole Newendorp, Harvard University, US‘Few things are more central to migration projects than the family, yet rarely in simple ways. This Handbook presents the transnational family in all of its complexity and multiplicity, tracing its diverse meanings over time, across space and generations. Inequalities and power dynamics are deeply woven into family relations, yet migration also generates novel familial arrangements and subjectivities. The rich contributions span a range of geographical contexts and adopt feminist, agency-centred and grounded approaches to crucially overturn long-standing normative assumptions about transnational families. The Handbook will be an essential resource for scholars and practitioners seeking to understand the personal and societal impacts of migration on families, and of families on migration.’ -- Megha Amrith, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, GermanyTable of ContentsContents: 1 Introduction to the Handbook on Migration and the Family 1 Johanna L. Waters and Brenda S.A. Yeoh PART I GENDER RELATIONS AND GENDER SUBJECTIVITIES 2 Nanny families and the making of gender (in)equality 20 Rosie Cox, Terese Anving and Sara Eldén 3 Transnational marriage migration: agency, structures and intimate gendered governmentality 42 Neil Amber Judge and Margaret Walton-Roberts 4 Nation, gender and location: understanding transnational families in the face of violence 65 Biftu Yousuf and Jennifer Hyndman 5 Vietnamese masculinities in transition: negotiating manhood in the context of female labour migration 86 Lan Anh Hoang 6 The transnationalisation of intimacy: family relations and changes in an age of global mobility and digital media 107 Earvin Charles Cabalquinto and Yang Hu PART II AGE AND INTERGENERATIONAL RELATIONSHIPS 7 Mobility and intergenerational transfers of capital: narrating expatriate and globally mobile children’s perspectives 130 Sin Yee Koh and I Lin Sin 8 Young people, intergenerationality and the familial reproduction of transnational migrations and im/mobilities 151 Caitríona Ní Laoire 9 Split households and migration in the Global South: gender and intergenerational perspectives 173 C. Cindy Fan 10 Negotiating long-distance caring relations: migrants in the UK and their families in Poland 197 Weronika Kloc-Nowak and Louise Ryan 11 Analysing youth migrations through the lens of generation 218 Rhondeni Kikon and Roy Huijsmans 12 Unaccompanied child migrants and family relationships 236 Katie Willis, Sue Clayton and Anna Gupta PART III POWER, SOCIAL INEQUALITIES AND SOCIAL MOBILITY 13 Families in educational migration: strategies, investments and emotions 257 Johanna L. Waters and Zhe Wang 14 Privileged migration and the family: family matters in corporate expatriation 279 Sophie Cranston and George Tan 15 Not as safe as houses: experiences of domestic violence among international migrant women 298 Cathy McIlwaine 16 Academic mobility and the family 320 Yanbo Hao and Maggi W.H. Leung 17 The heterosexual family ideal and its limitations for bi-national same-sex family formations 340 Claire Fletcher PART IV SPATIALITIES AND TEMPORALITIES 18 Migrant family separation, reunification and recalibration 366 Denise L. Spitzer and Sara Torres 19 ‘Maybe in the future I’ll have two homes’: temporalities of migration and family life among Vietnamese people in London 385 Annabelle Wilkins20 Offshoring social reproduction: low-wage labour circulation and the separation of work and family life 403 Thomas Saetre Jakobsen, Sam Scott and Johan Fredrik Rye 21 Growing over time: left-behind children in the past three decades 425 Theodora Lam 22 Transnational families and mobility regimes 445 Franchesca Morais and Brenda S.A. Yeoh Index 466
£210.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Digital Identity, Virtual Borders and Social
Book SynopsisThis insightful book discusses how states deploy frontier and digital technologies to manage and control migratory movements. Assessing the development of blockchain technologies for digital identities and cash transfer; artificial intelligence for smart borders, resettlement of refugees and assessing asylum applications; social media and mobile phone applications to track and surveil migrants, it critically examines the consequences of new technological developments and evaluates their impact on the rights of migrants and refugees.Chapters evaluate the technology-based public-private projects that govern migration globally and illustrate the political implications of these virtual borders. International contributors compare and contrast different forms of political expression, in both personal technologies, such as social media for refugees and smugglers, and automated decision-making algorithms used by states to enable migration governance. This timely book challenges hegemonic approach to migration governance and provides cases demonstrating the dangers of employing frontier technologies denying basic rights, liberties and agencies of migrants and refugees.Stepping into a contentious political climate for migrants and refugees, this provocative book is ideal reading for scholars and researchers of political science and public policy, particularly those focusing on migration and refugee studies. It will also benefit policymakers and practitioners dealing with migration, such as humanitarian NGOs, UN agencies and local authorities.Trade Review‘Digital Identity, Virtual Borders and Social Media presents sound, scrupulous research into the complexities of technology in migration.’ -- Magda Rodríguez Dehli, Routed‘A unique and seminal collection of seven erudite and informative contributions by experts in the field, Digital Identity, Virtual Borders and Social Media must be considered a core and essential addition to college and university library collections, and essential reading for students, academia, political activists, governmental policymakers, and non-specialist general readers with an interest in the subject.’ -- Paul T. Vogel, Midwest Book Review'The book is a timely contribution on how digital technology is used in the establishment, management and enforcement of physical and virtual borders. It offers a multi-faceted view into digital technologies used in the context of migration, offering insights into the potential of these technologies, but also exposing the risks, be it through direct use of technology, its problematic conceptualization, or through inequalities in accessing digital resources.' -- Albert Ali Salah, Utrecht University, the NetherlandsTable of ContentsContents: 1 Introduction to Digital Identity, Virtual Borders and Social Media 1 Emre Eren Korkmaz 2 Self-sovereign identity and forced migration: slippery terms and the refugee data apparatus 10 Margie Cheesman and Aiden Slavin 3 Digital identification for the vulnerable: continuities across a century of identification technologies 33 Aiden Slavin 4 Politics of technology: the use of artificial intelligence by US and Canadian immigration agencies and their impacts on human rights 52 Erin Harris and Roxana Akhmetova 5 Migration and smuggling across virtual borders: a European Union case study of internet governance and immigration politics 73 Johanna Bankston 6 Irregular mobility and network capital: the case of the Afghanistan-Iran smuggling route 98 Ruta Nimkar, Emily Savage and Abdullah Mohammadi 7 What shapes the attitude of the European Parliament voters toward migration? A comparative case study on Finland, Hungary and Bulgaria 120 Deniz Yetkin Aker Index
£82.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Migrants’ Attitudes and the Welfare State: The
Book SynopsisAnalysing two major surveys of 14 different migrant groups connected to Danish register data, this insightful book explores what migrants think of the welfare state. It investigates the question of whether migrants assimilate to the ideas of extensive state intervention in markets and families or if they retain the attitudes and values that are prevalent in their countries of origin.The authors examine what various migrant groups from countries including Poland, Romania, Spain, the UK, China, Japan, Turkey, Russia, the US, Pakistan, Lebanon, Iraq and the former-Yugoslavia living in Denmark think about the trustworthiness of state institutions, state responsibility, economic redistribution, female employment and childcare. Chapters also cover the key issues of national identification, social trust and welfare nationalism. Concluding that migrants from diverse backgrounds assimilate well into the welfare attitudes, norms and values of the Danish people in several areas, the book points to the potential assimilative impact of the welfare state.Incorporating new theoretical discussions, this book will be critical reading for academics and students studying migration and welfare states. It will also be a useful resource for comparative migration researchers interested in the impact of the host country context on migrants' assimilation patterns.Trade Review‘The book closes a gap in the field of migration and welfare studies as this is the first study of its kind in Europe. A further strength of the book is the international literature in English that is referenced. It is therefore an important resource for scholars in the field of comparative migration studies, but also for practitioners working in a diverse multicultural environment wishing to improve inclusion.’ -- Simone Emmert, European Journal of Social Security'Fascinating. This innovative book tracks migrants' rapid adoption of Danish values on the welfare state. This transition is not primarily the result of self-interest or socialization processes. Rather, welfare state institutions themselves change attitudes by generating new opportunity structures, new experiences and new perceptions of how Danish society works. This is a fundamentally optimistic story about the integrative power of welfare state institutions. A story with relevance far beyond Danish borders.' -- - Keith Banting, Queen's University, Canada'The question of whether immigration is compatible with a robust welfare state has received much attention in recent times. However, the extent to which immigrants in welfare states share the welfare attitudes of natives, and to which welfare regimes may foster immigrant assimilation to such attitudes, are issues that have been rather neglected. This book addresses these questions by providing a most thorough analysis of the case of Denmark. It is highly recommended to scholars working on immigration and on the future of the welfare state.' -- - Nils Holtug, University of Copenhagen, Denmark'This book on migrants' attitudes towards the Danish welfare state is a welcome contribution to the ongoing and at times rather anxious and alarming ''migration-welfare state problematic'' discourse. Its findings show that migrants from a range of different countries and cultures adapt their norms and values regarding social justice and actual welfare provision to those that are common in their new country of residence, thereby strengthening, instead of threatening, the social legitimacy of the highly developed Danish welfare state. This has important implications for how in the wider EU we can, or should, see and value the problematic.' -- - Wim van Oorschot, Leuven University, BelgiumTable of ContentsContents: PART I 1. Introduction 2. Theoretical perspectives on the assimilative impact of welfare state institutions 3. The surveys and register data PART II 4. The mixed background of the migrant groups 5. The mixed self-interest in the welfare state PART III 6. Migrants’ trust in Danish institutions 7. Migrants’ attitudes towards the government providing welfare 8. Migrants’ attitudes towards redistribution and poverty relief 9. Migrants’ attitudes towards female employment 10. Migrants’ attitudes towards public childcare PART IV 11. Attitudes to migrants’ access to equal social rights 12. Migrants’ social trust 13. Conclusion References Index
£88.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Research Handbook on Irregular Migration
Book SynopsisMoving away from state categorizations on irregular migration, this Research Handbook critically examines processes and dynamics that generate and reproduce irregularity, and discusses who may count as an irregular migrant.Acknowledging that irregular migration is not just a South-North issue, chapters investigate the many different pathways into irregularity, demonstrating the benefits of understanding dynamics behind irregular migration over statistics. Organised into six thematic parts covering key issues such as approaches and perspectives for research, informal labour and the challenges faced by migrant families, global contributors from a variety of disciplines provide an expert review of geographical and historical paths into irregular migration. Offering their background knowledge and highlighting tools to better understand how irregular migration is linked to geopolitics and migration policies, the Research Handbook on Irregular Migration guides readers through the complex issues facing migrants worldwide. Written in a comprehensive yet accessible style, this Research Handbook will be an excellent resource for undergraduate and graduate students as well researchers and academics interested in migration, policy, law, security, border crossing, informal labour, crime and civil support to migrants.Trade Review‘With a stellar line up of established and early career scholars in the field, this Handbook is a must-read for everyone interested in understanding the multi-scalar politics of migrants’ irregularisation, its everyday impacts on the lives of migrants with no or precarious immigration status and opportunities and spaces for contestation and resistance.’ -- Nando Sigona, University of Birmingham, UK‘This timely volume brings together leading theorists on irregular migration to provide a comprehensive picture of cutting-edge research in the field. A must read for scholars of borders, migration, and state violence.’ -- Reece Jones, University of Hawai'i-Manoa, USTable of ContentsContents: Preface xxi Introduction: the production of irregular migration 1 Ilse van Liempt, Joris Schapendonk and Amalia Campos-Delgado PART I APPROACHES AND PERSPECTIVES ON IRREGULAR MIGRATION 1 Irregular migration and migration control policies 14 Anna Triandafyllidou 2 Invisible, vulnerable, heroic and criminal: a gendered history of migration labelling 25 Marlou Schrover 3 How to research “irregular” migration: approaches and perspectives from the field 36 Shiva S. Mohan, Alison Mountz, Monica Romero and Ana Visan 4 Humans, not arrows: countering the violent cartography of undocumented migration 49 Henk van Houtum and Rodrigo Bueno Lacy 5 Situated glossaries of (ir)regular migration 66 Kolar Aparna, Manju Sharma, Arlene Bugabo and Beatrice Catanzaro 6 Beach encounters: migrant death and forensics as an art of paying attention 81 Amade M’charek PART II ASPIRATIONS AND FACILITATION OF IRREGULAR MIGRATION 7 Welcome aboard KLM Air Land! Hope and uncertainty in precarious migration projects 95 Nauja Kleist 8 Irregular migrants and families: the challenges of transnational family lives in times of limited mobility and transient settlement 106 Inka Stock 9 Deterrence or empowerment? Awareness and information campaigns as a migration governance tool to stop irregular migration 118 Ida Marie Savio Vammen 10 How unintended are these consequences? The changing environment for migration facilitation in Niger since 2015 130 Ekaterina Golovko and Fransje Molenaar 11 Re-socializing migrant networks: moving beyond dominant migrant-network approaches 140 Richard Staring and Mieke Kox PART III EVERYDAY LIFE AND (IM)MOBILITY 12 The irregularity maze: investigating asymmetries and discontinuities in the interaction between migrants’ geographic mobility and regulatory frameworks 153 Milena Belloni, Ferruccio Pastore and Emanuela Roman 13 Stuck in camps, at sea and in illegality: dimensions of stuckedness endured by Rohingya refugees 168 Antje Missbach 14 Irregular times: refugees’ struggles for a temporal justice in the European (im)mobility regime 178 Elena Fontanari 15 Children’s mobility across the EU governance of unauthorized migration as a game of chutes and ladders: evidence from Libya, Italy, Greece and Belgium 190 Giacomo Orsini, Océane Uzureau, Malte Behrendt, Marina Rota, Sarah Adeyinka, Ilse Derluyn and Ine Lietaert 16 The U.S. response to undocumented immigrant youth: “deferred” mobilities in New York 202 Guillermo Yrizar Barbosa PART IV INFORMAL AND IRREGULAR LABOUR AND EXPLOITABILITY 17 Migrant women workers in Europe: forms of irregularity and conditions of vulnerability 215 Giulia Garofalo Geymonat, Sabrina Marchetti and Letizia Palumbo 18 Casting outside regular pathways: state restrictions to Sri Lankan female migration 227 Chandima Arambepola 19 Becoming sanfei: the irregularization of foreign migrants in China 239 Guangzhi Huang and Heidi Østbø Haugen The research for this book chapter has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (Grant Agreement No. 802070). 20 Making a living while on the move: migrant trajectories, hierarchized mobilities and local labour landscapes in Central America 250 Nanneke Winters 21 Illegalized refugees seeking protection in the Hong Kong economy 261 Francesco Vecchio PART V GEOPOLITICS AND MICROPOLITICS OF CONTROL 22 Helping people feel that their future lies at home: the geopolitics of externalising irregular migration control in the European Union 271 Michael Collyer 23 Regularizing irregular sojourners: the avenue of “deservingness” 282 Maurizio Ambrosini 24 Being (in)visible: exploring the post-return categorisations of Cameroonian migrants 293 Presca Wanki, Ilse Derluyn and Ine Lietaert 25 On the administration of evil: frontline bureaucrats resolving ethical tensions while enforcing oppressive deportation policies 305 Barak Kalir 26 Dirty borderwork and maculated borders: examining the Mexican transit control regime 316 Amalia Campos-Delgado PART VI SOLIDARITY, ADVOCACY AND CONTESTATION 27 Autonomous and civic solidarity practices towards irregular migrants in Europe 328 Martin Bak Jørgensen 28 Undocumented immigrant activism: the struggle for rights and recognition 338 Walter J. Nicholls and Zayda Sorrell-Medina 29 Autonomous migration and transgressive solidarity: the case of the El Hiblu 3 Daniela DeBono and Ċetta Mainwaring 30 Contesting the lethal Mediterranean frontier Charles Heller, Lorenzo Pezzani and Maurice Stierl Afterword Alison Mountz Index
£135.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd A Research Agenda for Migration and Health
Book SynopsisElgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of travel. They are relevant but also visionary. International migration has emerged as one of the most pressing issues faced by national and regional governments in our modern world. This Research Agenda provides much-needed discussion on the health of migrants, and fundamental research directions for the future. The editors draw together key contributions that address people with a range of immigration statuses, including refugees. Written by leading experts in the field, chapters explore the evolving nature of health, from how this is experienced by migrants in their countries of origin, to the impact of the immigrant journey and experiences in their country of residence. Topical and timely, the Research Agenda offers key insights into previously underdeveloped areas of study, including an analysis of female migrants, a discussion of immigration relative to the Global South, and the relationship between climate change, migration and health. An important read for human geography scholars, this will be particularly useful for those looking into population and health geography and demography. It will also be beneficial to sociology and anthropology scholars interested in immigration and health. Contributors include: A.T. Banerjee, V. Chouinard, X. Deng, S. Gal, S. Gravel, J. Hanley, J. Hennebry, L. Hunter, A. Kobayashi, J.-H. Koo, L. Malhaire, K.B. Newbold, J.-A. Osei-Twum, S. Park, D.H. Simon, K. Stelfox, M. Walton-Roberts, L. Wang, K. WilsonTrade Review‘The various essays provide some innovative exploration of the migration-health nexus. As such, the book promises to be inspirational for scholars of geography, public health and related fields. Graduate students who seek to get oriented in this truly complex field and to identify salient research questions will undoubtedly benefit from perusing the essays of this volume.’ -- Brigitte Waldorf, Regional Science Policy and Practice‘A timely contribution to the field of migration and health, and a valuable resource for researchers seeking to explore newer questions. The nine chapters in this book offer diverse perspectives on themes such as inequity and discrimination in access to healthcare, gender, cultural safety, food security, disability and climate change as experienced by immigrants from countries in the Global South. The authors challenge and demystify pre-existing frameworks on migrant health, seek to broaden the theoretical and methodological scope of the field and provide a research agenda for future work.’ -- Divya Ravindranath, Progress in Development Studies‘It is a valuable resource for those seeking to refine their research questions and as a means to draw parallels across work on migration and health. While focused on international migration, the questions and approaches outlined are relevant to research on internal migration, and there is significant space to better articulate the connections between internal migration, international migration, and health.’ -- Frances Darlington-Pollock, Geographical Research'Bruce Newbold and Kathi Wilson are both health geographers with a strong legacy; this edited volume on which they have partnered is no exception. As they state in their opening chapter, the health of an immigrant is shaped by the immigration journey and the factors precipitating it (forced versus voluntary; economic, social, cultural, environmental push and pull factors…). What Newbold and Wilson have done with this edited volume is bring the immigrant health literature into the 21st Century by bringing heretofore invisible issues to the forefront: gender; climate change; inequalities in the global south. Their section on future research directions takes us even further through suggestions for alternative theoretical and epistemological approaches to the growing issues of immigration and immigrant health.' --Susan J Elliot, University of Waterloo, Canada'Tapping into the expertise from scholars in geography, international affairs, nursing, psychiatry, public health, social service and social work, A Research Agenda for Migration and Health fills a gap in migration studies by foregrounding climate change, gender/race and health, health status, health care, nutrition and their impacts.' --Wei Li, Arizona State University, USTable of ContentsContents: 1. Introduction: Migration and Health K. Bruce Newbold and Kathi Wilson 2. Disability, Migration and Health in the Global South: An Agenda for Research and Action Vera Chouinard 3. Healthcare Access among Immigrants and Transnational Migrants Lu Wang 4. Climate Change, Migration and Health Lori M. Hunter and Daniel H. Simon 5. Migrant Worker Strategies in Access to Health: Recognizing agency in a context of constraints Jill Hanley, Sol Park, Sylvie Gravel, Jah-Hon Koo, Loic Malhaire and Sigalit Gal 6. Rebalancing Act: Promoting an international research agenda on women migrant careworkers’ health and rights Jenna Hennebry and Margaret Walton-Roberts 7. Securing Culturally Appropriate Food for Refugee Women in Canada: Opportunities for Research Katherine B. Stelfox and K. Bruce Newbold 8. An Agenda for Newcomer Health Care? Research in Canada Audrey Kobayashi and Xiaojun Deng 9. Exploring the Applicability of Indigenous Cultural Safety to Immigrant Health Research Jo-Ann Osei-Twum, Erika Pulfer and Ananya T. Banerjee Index
£24.95
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd UN-ASEAN Coordination: Policy Transfer and
Book SynopsisDespite the high frequency of their interactions, the policy coordination process between the United Nations (UN) and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) has been underexamined in global and regional governance and ASEAN studies literature. To chart this important terrain, this incisive book contributes to scholarship by investigating UN-ASEAN policy coordination in the case of trafficking in persons (TIP).Guangyu Qiao-Franco advances a conceptual framework designed to explore the coordination between the UN and ASEAN, based on theories of policy transfer, norm diffusion, regime complex, and institutional interaction. By examining an extensive case study that traces developments in Southeast Asian regional governance since the early 1980s, this book contains rich information on the UN and ASEAN’s TIP policies, lobbying and involvement of various actors, and the specific historical contexts of regional policy debates. Featuring analysis based on empirical data collected through 79 interviews with key participants in the TIP policy process across Southeast Asia, the book reveals the black box of ASEAN policymaking that has led to positive changes in human trafficking governance.This dynamic book will interest students and scholars of international relations, law, criminology, and migration studies. Its consideration of how disparate regional states might collaborate on human trafficking issues will further benefit practitioners and professionals working in governments of ASEAN member states, international organisations, and NGOs.Trade Review‘UN-ASEAN Coordination presents pioneering research on policy transfer from the United Nations to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in human trafficking. Guangyu Qiao-Franco makes an important contribution to our understanding of policy transfer by elucidating how trust built at regional and international levels brings policy changes.’ -- Nana Oishi, University of Melbourne, Australia‘Dr. Qiao-Franco has produced an original and insightful analysis of a serious problem in today’s world – human trafficking, particularly within and from South-East Asia. But arguably the most valuable aspect of her analysis is the focus on the interaction between the UN and ASEAN in combating this evil, and on why coordination between the two is higher than in other policy areas.’ -- Leslie Holmes, University of Melbourne, AustraliaTable of ContentsContents: Preface 1. Introduction to UN-ASEAN Coordination: Policy Transfer and Regional Cooperation Against Human Trafficking in Southeast Asia 2. Conceptualising UN-ASEAN Policy Transfer 3. The Evolution of UN Frameworks on Human Trafficking and Competing Narratives in UN-ASEAN Policy Transfer 4. Southeast Asia Human Trafficking Status Overview, Relevant Actors and Networks 5. Before the ASEAN Convention: Trafficking in Persons as a Transnational Crime Conflated with Sex Trafficking 6. Negotiating the ASEAN Convention Against Trafficking in Persons: Towards a Broader Understanding of Trafficking Conclusion Appendix A Fieldtrip Itinerary and Affiliated Organisations of Interviewees Index
£80.00
Liverpool University Press European Roma: Lives beyond Stereotypes
Book SynopsisAn Open Access edition of this book is available on the Liverpool University Press website and the OAPEN library. This book, designed as a resource for scholars, educators, activists and non-specialist readers, presents the results of new research on the role of Romani groups in European culture and society since the nineteenth century. Its specific focus is on the ways in which Romani actors, in their interactions with non-Romanies, have contributed to shaping Europe’s public spaces. Twelve chapters recount the experiences and accomplishments of individuals and families, from across Europe (England, France, Spain, Germany, Poland, Hungary, Romania and Finland) and Canada. All based on new research, and maintaining a focus on the real lives and activities of Romani people rather than on the perspective of the majority societies, these studies exemplify the creative presence of Romani people in the fields of politics, economics and culture. We see them as writers, artists and performers, political activists and resistance fighters, traders and entrepreneurs, circus and cinema managers and purveyors of popular science. Sensitive to the ambivalent position from which Roma act, the cases are linked and contextualized by a general introduction and by section introductions written by leading scholars of Romani studies with expertise in history, ethnography, musicology, literary and discourse studies and visual culture. The volume is richly illustrated, including many images that have never been published before, and includes an extensive bibliography / guide to further reading. Contributors to the volume: Begoña Barrera, Beatriz Carrillo de los Reyes, Malte Gasche, Paweł Lechowski, Anna G. Piotrowska, Laurence Prempain, Juan Pro, Eve Rosenhaft, Carolina García Sanz, María Sierra, and Tamara West.Trade Review'This is an outstanding collection of studies which demonstrate that European Romani groups historically made significant contributions to our common past as artists and activists, traders and musicians, mobile entertainers in circuses or pioneers of travelling cinema. Without hiding the effects of stigma these people suffer or downplaying the tragic consequences of the genocidal regimes of the twentieth century, the authors show that Roma were far from being passive victims of the societies they are part of; they pursue and succeed to realize their own ambitions. Some of the fine biographies in this volume remind us that even from a disadvantaged social position Roma acted also as cultural agents for the broader society co-producing European history.' László Fosztó, ISPMN, Romanian Institute for Research on National MinoritiesTable of ContentsAcknowledgementsList of IllustrationsContributorsGeneral Introduction by Eve Rosenhaft and María Sierra Section One: PoliticsIntroduction: The Spaces of Politics: Roma Experiences of Citizenship by María SierraChapter 1 Helios Gómez: To be Roma in the Revolution by Juan ProChapter 2 The Long Road in Search of a Tzigane Language: Sandra Jayat by Begoña BarreraChapter 3 Ronald Lee: Discovering Romanestan between Canada and Europe by Carolina García SanzSection Two: Economic lifeIntroduction: Travelling and Trading – Romani Horse Dealers in the Making of Europe’s Economic Multiculture by Eve Rosenhaft and Tamara WestChapter 4 Intersecting Lives: The Brough Hill Fair as Biography-in-Pieces by Tamara WestChapter 5 “Invaders” – Mobility and Economy in the Lives of the Laubinger Family by Eve Rosenhaft and Tamara WestChapter 6 The Florians, the Habedanks and the Horse Fair at Wehlau by Eve Rosenhaft Section Three: MusicIntroduction: The Space for/of Romani Music by Anna G. PiotrowskaChapter 7 Romani Virtuosi – A Multifaceted Portrait by Anna G. Piotrowska Chapter 8 From the History of the Lăutari in Romania by Anna G. Piotrowska Chapter 9 The Story of Corroro, a Musical Genius from Kraków by Anna G. Piotrowska in collaboration with Paweł LechowskiSection Four: Circus People and ShowmenIntroduction: Romani Groups in the Public Space of the Circus and Other Showgrounds by Malte GascheChapter 10 Travelling Cinema: When Roma Put the World within One’s Grasp by Laurence PrempainChapter 11 From Where They Were: Resistance by Romani Circus People during the Second World War by Laurence PrempainChapter 12 Cowboys and Indians: Wild West Shows as Portals to Exotic Otherness and the Big, Wide World by Malte GascheAfterword by Beatriz CarrilloBibliographyIndex
£109.50
Liverpool University Press European Roma: Lives beyond Stereotypes
Book SynopsisAn Open Access edition of this book is available on the Liverpool University Press website and the OAPEN library. This book, designed as a resource for scholars, educators, activists and non-specialist readers, presents the results of new research on the role of Romani groups in European culture and society since the nineteenth century. Its specific focus is on the ways in which Romani actors, in their interactions with non-Romanies, have contributed to shaping Europe’s public spaces. Twelve chapters recount the experiences and accomplishments of individuals and families, from across Europe (England, France, Spain, Germany, Poland, Hungary, Romania and Finland) and Canada. All based on new research, and maintaining a focus on the real lives and activities of Romani people rather than on the perspective of the majority societies, these studies exemplify the creative presence of Romani people in the fields of politics, economics and culture. We see them as writers, artists and performers, political activists and resistance fighters, traders and entrepreneurs, circus and cinema managers and purveyors of popular science. Sensitive to the ambivalent position from which Roma act, the cases are linked and contextualized by a general introduction and by section introductions written by leading scholars of Romani studies with expertise in history, ethnography, musicology, literary and discourse studies and visual culture. The volume is richly illustrated, including many images that have never been published before, and includes an extensive bibliography / guide to further reading. Contributors to the volume: Begoña Barrera, Beatriz Carrillo de los Reyes, Malte Gasche, Paweł Lechowski, Anna G. Piotrowska, Laurence Prempain, Juan Pro, Eve Rosenhaft, Carolina García Sanz, María Sierra, and Tamara West.Trade Review'This is an outstanding collection of studies which demonstrate that European Romani groups historically made significant contributions to our common past as artists and activists, traders and musicians, mobile entertainers in circuses or pioneers of travelling cinema. Without hiding the effects of stigma these people suffer or downplaying the tragic consequences of the genocidal regimes of the twentieth century, the authors show that Roma were far from being passive victims of the societies they are part of; they pursue and succeed to realize their own ambitions. Some of the fine biographies in this volume remind us that even from a disadvantaged social position Roma acted also as cultural agents for the broader society co-producing European history.' László Fosztó, ISPMN, Romanian Institute for Research on National MinoritiesTable of ContentsAcknowledgementsList of IllustrationsContributorsGeneral Introduction by Eve Rosenhaft and María Sierra Section One: PoliticsIntroduction: The Spaces of Politics: Roma Experiences of Citizenship by María SierraChapter 1 Helios Gómez: To be Roma in the Revolution by Juan ProChapter 2 The Long Road in Search of a Tzigane Language: Sandra Jayat by Begoña BarreraChapter 3 Ronald Lee: Discovering Romanestan between Canada and Europe by Carolina García SanzSection Two: Economic lifeIntroduction: Travelling and Trading – Romani Horse Dealers in the Making of Europe’s Economic Multiculture by Eve Rosenhaft and Tamara WestChapter 4 Intersecting Lives: The Brough Hill Fair as Biography-in-Pieces by Tamara WestChapter 5 “Invaders” – Mobility and Economy in the Lives of the Laubinger Family by Eve Rosenhaft and Tamara WestChapter 6 The Florians, the Habedanks and the Horse Fair at Wehlau by Eve Rosenhaft Section Three: MusicIntroduction: The Space for/of Romani Music by Anna G. PiotrowskaChapter 7 Romani Virtuosi – A Multifaceted Portrait by Anna G. Piotrowska Chapter 8 From the History of the Lăutari in Romania by Anna G. Piotrowska Chapter 9 The Story of Corroro, a Musical Genius from Kraków by Anna G. Piotrowska in collaboration with Paweł LechowskiSection Four: Circus People and ShowmenIntroduction: Romani Groups in the Public Space of the Circus and Other Showgrounds by Malte GascheChapter 10 Travelling Cinema: When Roma Put the World within One’s Grasp by Laurence PrempainChapter 11 From Where They Were: Resistance by Romani Circus People during the Second World War by Laurence PrempainChapter 12 Cowboys and Indians: Wild West Shows as Portals to Exotic Otherness and the Big, Wide World by Malte GascheAfterword by Beatriz CarrilloBibliographyIndex
£30.79
Liverpool University Press Italy is Out
Book SynopsisItaly is Out is the fruit of the collaboration between Mario Badagliacca, the established documentary photographer, and the research team of ‘Transnationalizing Modern Languages: Mobility, Identity and Translation in Modern Italian Cultures’ (2014-16). This ARHC-funded project explored the implications of Italian migration in a global perspective tracing cultural transformations across borders, generations, and language. Badagliacca visited some of the project’s key locations conducting interviews with Italians or people of Italian descent before photographing them in familiar locations. The subjects of the portraits were invited to bring along three objects representing their attachment to Italy. The sheer variety of the objects which appear alongside the portraits suggest the diversity of the migrant experience. Photographs shot in London, New York, and Buenos Aires feature members of the historical Italian community, but also first generation migrants in search of opportunities not offered at home. A similar complexity emerges, more unexpectedly, in the postcolonial Italian communities of Tunis and Addis Abeba. The photographs are accompanied by essays written by members of the research team and people who have in some way participated in the project. Fiction, autobiography and academic reflection sit side by side adding to Badagliacca’s multifaceted exploration of Italians abroad.Trade Review‘Italy is Out, as the title suggests, oversteps the dichotomy of inside-outside by dismissing the idea of Italian migrants as inhabitants of a periphery far from the geographical centre... being Italian means to be part of this collective act of making kin between people and cultures, as the volume itself does by encompassing images and words authored by scholars, artists and migrants themselves. In an ongoing process of mirroring faces, stories and objects, Italy is Out is able to picture, also literally, the complex and dynamic culture of Italy throughout the last two centuries.’ Anna Finozzi, Annali d’ItalianisticaTable of ContentsMario Badagliacca and Derek Duncan: Introductory Note1) Mario Badagliacca, Myth proposes2) Nicoletta Vallorani, Magical Objects: pictures of Italians across the world3) Derek Duncan, 77214) Donna Gabbaccia, Seeing Diaspora5) Luci Callipari-Marcuzzo, Tracciando fili del passato (Tracing threads of the past)6) Edvige Giunta, Llammicu7) Charles Burdett, The Italian Community of Addis Ababa8) Shirin Ramzanali Fazel, My Beloved Stepmother9) Georgia Wall, Italian Migration/Personal Effects10) Barbara Spadaro, Italian Mobilities: A View from Tunis11) Jacopo Colombini, Fare l’italiano12) Margaret Hills de Zárate, The Multiple Lives of ThingsNotes on Contributors
£22.33
Liverpool University Press Autofiction: A Female Francophone Aesthetic of
Book SynopsisAutofiction: A Female Francophone Aesthetic of Exile explores the multiple aspects of exile, displacement, mobility, and identity as expressed in contemporary autofictional work written in French by women writers from across the francophone world. Drawing on postcolonial theory, gender theory, and autobiographical theory, the book analyses narratives of exile by six authors who are shaped by their multiple locales of attachment: Kim Lefèvre (Vietnam/France), Gisèle Pineau (Guadeloupe/mainland France), Nina Bouraoui (Algeria/France), Michèle Rakotoson (Madagascar/France), Véronique Tadjo (Côte d’Ivoire/France), and Abla Farhoud (Lebanon/Quebec). In this way, the book argues that the French colonial past continues to mould female articulations of mobility and identity in the postcolonial present.Responding to gaps in the critical discourse of exile, namely gender, this book brings genre in both its forms — gender and literary genre — to bear on narratives of exile, arguing that the reconceptualization of categories of mobility occurs specifically in women’s autofictional writing. The six authors complicate discussions of exile as they are highly mobile, hybrid subjects. This rootless existence, however, often renders them alienated and ‘out of place’. While ensuring not to trivialize the very real difficulties faced by those whose exile is not a matter of choice, the book argues that the six authors experience their hybridity as both a literal and a metaphorical exile, a source of both creativity and trauma.Trade Review“A compelling and lucid exploration of the female francophone aesthetics of exile in six contemporary authors, this is a fascinating and important intervention in theories of exile and francophone studies more widely.”Kathryn Robson, Newcastle UniversityTable of ContentsAcknowledgementsIntroduction: Beyond Exile and the Limitations of Postcolonial Paradigms in Francophone Women’s WritingChapter One: Exile, Autofiction, and Women’s WritingChapter Two: Exile, Métissage, and Family Estrangement in Kim Lefèvre’s Autobiographical NarrativesChapter Three: Exile as a ‘Forced Choice’: War and Migration in Gisèle Pineau’s L’Exil selon JuliaChapter Four: The Four Problems of Nina BouraouiChapter Five: Madagascar: ‘A No-Woman’s-Land’? Exile and Errance in Michèle Rakotoson’s Juillet au pays: chroniques d’un retour à MadagascarChapter Six: Return as Exile in Véronique Tadjo’s Loin de mon pèreChapter Seven: Transgenerational Exile in Abla Farhoud’s AutofictionConclusionBibliography
£109.50
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Handbook on Home and Migration
Book SynopsisThis dynamic Handbook unpacks the entanglements between the two notions of home and migration, which illuminate the lived experiences of (in)voluntary mobilities and the contested terrain of inclusion and belonging.Drawing on cross-disciplinary contributions from leading international scholars, the Handbook advances research on the social study of home in relation to migration, refugee, displacement, and diaspora studies. It investigates the interplay between the notions of house and home, examining the relevance of home as a category of both analysis and practice. With a global and comparative range of case studies and examples, chapters bridge disciplines in unprecedented ways, exploring the existential, epistemological, and political implications of home for those struggling for it from afar and from the margins.Synthesising and systematising state-of-the-art research on home and migration, this groundbreaking Handbook will prove an invaluable resource for students, scholars, and researchers of sociology, anthropology, geography, and architecture. Practitioners and volunteers involved in social welfare, housing, informal social support, and mobilisations, for or by migrants and refugees, will also find this book of importance.Trade Review‘By focusing on home and its mutual entanglements with migration, this book brings fresh eyes to migration studies. What do voluntary and forced migrants lose with respect to home and how do they rebuild and transform it along their way? How does the ability to recreate the emotional, sensorial, and cultural dimensions of home vary across groups and what impact does this have on migrants’ ability to achieve some measure of inclusion and belonging? Bringing together an interdisciplinary team of eminent scholars from around the world, this book provides valuable insights and nuances our understanding of contemporary migration.’ -- Peggy Levitt, Wellesley College, US‘The home can seem so solid and fixed. But seen from the perspective of migration it is suddenly set in motion as the vehicle that might take the paths of homing or displacement, home making and unmaking, security and fragility, memory and affectivity. At the same time, a focus on the home as the point of reference for all these dynamic processes provides an ideal position from which to gain an empathetic grounding in the lived experience of migrants. With over fifty chapters, this volume is able to provide an unprecedented sense of the diversity of these experiences and the multiple contexts that need to be considered for a more comprehensive assessment of this relationship between migration and home.’ -- Daniel Miller, University College London, UK‘This impressive and comprehensive Handbook is the culmination of extensive work on the meaning of home directed by the editor. For migrants and refugees, feeling at home is a pressing and sometimes existential issue but, as the rich array of contributors show, creating a reassuring home in our crisis-ridden world is a problem we all face.’ -- Robin Cohen, University of Oxford, UK‘This exceptionally rich book about home and the activity of homing among migrants, empirically and theoretically wide-ranging, is bound to establish itself as the standard reference in the field. It also points ahead towards new conceptualisations of the home, certainly with respect to people on the move, but also in a general sense. Through its focus on people to whom the home is a precarious resource which has to be created, sometimes from scratch, the book raises fundamental questions about social life and belonging.’ -- Thomas Hylland Eriksen, University of Oslo, Norway‘This comprehensive, insightful, beautiful collection opens a window into the multiple, everyday meanings of “home” under conditions of migration and displacement. Exceptionally well-integrated, the collection invites us to a fascinating conversation about home across vast geographies, disciplines, and methods. Indispensable reading for anyone who cares about home.’ -- Cecilia Menjivar, University of California, USTable of ContentsContents: 1 Introduction: home and migration – setting the terms of belonging and place-making on the move 1 Paolo Boccagni PART I BACKGROUNDS 2 Migrants of identity: cosmopolitan actors at home in the world 30 Nigel Rapport and Andrew Dawson 3 Home and forced migration 42 Giorgia Donà, Cathrine Brun and Anita Fábos 4 Housing studies, migration and home 55 Keith Jacobs 5 The migrant house: the meaning of its architecture and materiality 66 Iris Levin 6 Towards a social history of home and migration 77 Rosa Salzberg 7 Moving toward home away from home: a cultural psychology perspective on home and migration 90 Mariann Märtsin and Annela Samuel 8 Between longing and belonging: home, homemaking and diasporas 100 Jayani Bonnerjee 9 The paradox of home: an interview with Les Back 112 PART II QUESTIONS 10 Senses of home in the modern world 121 Gordon Mathews 11 Temporalities of migration and homemaking 131 Brenda S.A. Yeoh and Franchesca Morais 12 Governing the state as a home: domopolitics and migration 145 William Walters 13 Settler colonialism and home 158 Ariel Handel and Hagar Kotef 14 Home and the politics of location and displacement 170 Halleh Ghorashi 15 On the biopsychosocial impacts of extreme domicide 183 Bree Akesson 16 Home, nativism and migration 195 Jan Willem Duyvendak 17 Moving from home to accommodation – a conceptual alternative for the historical manipulation of home for violent and exclusionary ends: an interview with Barak Kalir 206 PART III LIVED EXPERIENCE 18 Home and homemaking in local and transnational family lives 215 Angelie Marilla and Asuncion Fresnoza-Flot 19 Feeling at home: migrant homemaking through the senses 228 Diana Mata-Codesal 20 Making home through memories and ritualised social practices 239 Anastasia Christou 21 Moving bricks: strategies for a genealogy of housing, migration, and social movements 252 Araceli Masterson-Algar and Edward Jackiewicz 22 Home and homemaking during refugee journeys 265 Elina Paju, Lena Näre and Paula Merikoski 23 Migration, home, and homemaking in contemporary visual art 279 Helen Underhill 24 Fictions of home: contemporary Palestinian narratives of migration 291 Yasmine Shamma 25 Religion, immigration, and homemaking: an interview with Peter Kivisto 304 PART IV SCALES AND MATERIALITIES 26 The importance of the housing market for the housing opportunities of immigrants 313 Rikke Skovgaard Nielsen and Hans Skifter Andersen 27 Diasporic housing and the ‘valuing’ of home 328 Lauren Wagner 28 Migrants’ homemaking practices in shared housing 338 Zahra Nasreen 29 Refugee housing and homing: negotiating self and humanity 350 Anne Sigfrid Grønseth 30 The works of homemaking: migration, domestic materiality, and everyday life 365 Marta Vilar Rosales 31 Scaling down migrant homemaking: home possessions and the embodied experience of home 377 Anna Pechurina 32 A (dis)connected homescape: the promise, limits, and paradox of migrants’ homemaking practices in the digital age 388 Earvin Charles Cabalquinto and Xinyu Zhao PART V DIFFERENCES AND INEQUALITIES 33 Gendering home and migration 400 Annabelle Wilkins 34 Migration and home in research with children and young people: story, participation, agency 411 Marta Moskal 35 Homemaking and cohousing by postcolonial migrants in later life 426 Louise Meijering and Ajay Bailey 36 Making home at the borders of citizenship: migrants, home, and (il)legality 438 Paola Bonizzoni, Enrico Gargiulo, and Maurizio Artero 37 Home and homemaking practices among skilled Indian migrants 453 Ajay Bailey 38 Polish multiple migrants and their narratives of home and homemaking over time 466 Aleksandra Winiarska, Justyna Salamońska, Marta Kluszczyńska and Aneta Krzyworzeka-Jelinowska 39 Home, migration, and Roma people in Europe 481 Stefano Piemontese and Gaja Maestri 40 Why (and how) home matters in the “stay-at-home” order and beyond 493 Tasoulla Hadjiyanni 41 Homemaking and mobilities among LGBT people: an interview with Andrew Gorman-Murray 507 PART VI METHODS 42 Unveiling the (trans)national in the home space: an auto-ethnography 515 Magdalena Nowicka 43 Narrating home: oral histories as documents and practices of homing 529 Alexander Freund 44 Visual research and participatory research methods 543 Charishma Ratnam 45 Researching home through the narratives of displaced people 554 Luis Eduardo Pérez Murcia 46 Exploring home and migration through quantitative research: enlarging scales, unsettling questions 567 Paolo Boccagni, Cristiano Santinello and Bernardo Armanni PART VII BEYOND THE WEST 47 Between home and accommodation: migration and housing in the Arab region between circular ideals and diasporic lives 581 Samuli Schielke 48 Migrant homemaking in Sub-Saharan Africa: from self-help housing to conspicuous construction 595 Julia Pauli 49 Norms and forms of the remittance landscape in Latin America 609 Christien Klaufus 50 House, home, and homemaking in post-Soviet migratory contexts: insights from research in Russia and Japan 621 Ksenia Golovina, Anna Pechurina, Anna Rocheva, and Evgeni Varshaver 51 Making sense of family and home: multi-generational immigrant families from China to New Zealand 635 Liangni Sally Liu and Guanyu Jason Ran 52 Remittances and transnational housing among the Indian diaspora: home as a project 647 S. Irudaya Rajan and Anand P. Cherian 53 Conclusion: on the futures of home and migration 660 Paolo Boccagni Index
£260.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Handbook of Migration Ethnicity and Diversity
Book Synopsis
£180.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Migration Patterns Across the Mediterranean:
Book SynopsisWith contributions from leading scholars in Southern Europe, this compelling book demonstrates the plurality of migratory circumstances and analyses the significance of the Mediterranean migration model.Highlighting the challenges of studying the variability and heterogeneity of migratory patterns in the Mediterranean, this insightful book provides a comprehensive examination of the spatial-temporal scales and sedimentation of different migratory configurations. Chapters explore the continuities between colonial past, postcolonialism and migration; the integration and exploitation in the labour market; and the impact of political discourses on migrants and non-migrants.Contributors analyse the links between race and gender relations, colonialism, and migration policies across countries including Greece, Italy, Lebanon, the Maghreb region, and Spain.Proposing that the ‘principle of coexistence’ can be an interpretive tool for studying migration in the Mediterranean, this book will be essential for students and researchers in comparative social policy, cultural sociology, development studies, history and migration studies. It will also be beneficial for policymakers and practitioners in national and international political bodies and agencies.Trade Review‘An indispensable contribution to comparative immigration studies, this book brings together an impressive group of country specialists on southern European migration, working in a broad range of disciplines. While deeply sensitive to historical context, the contributors offer original insights into ongoing policy issues like the tension between child/elder-care needs of native-born families and restrictive immigration measures. This book is a model of cross-national scholarship that breaks new theoretical ground.’ -- Wayne A. Cornelius, University of California, San Diego, US‘With a multidisciplinary and outward looking (not Eurocentric) perspective, this book offers one of the most comprehensive surveys of research on migration in the Mediterranean area. The contributions cover countries on the European side and those on the opposite side of the Mediterranean. They examine the policies adopted, the motivations and the aims of the multiple parties involved.’ -- Paola Corti, University of Turin, ItalyTable of ContentsContents: Introduction: broadening the scope of Southern European migration 1 Adelina Miranda and Antía Pérez-Caramés An extended foreword to a critique on Mediterranean Europe as a place of migration 11 Natalia Ribas-Mateos and Jorge Malheiros PART I MOBILITIES AND COLONIALISMS 1 Human mobility in the pre-modern Mediterranean 30 Wolfgang Kaiser and Claudia Moatti 2 Migration and otherness in the Mediterranean region: colonial past and postcolonial continuities through the conception of the ‘Other Moor’ 50 María-Jesús Cabezón-Fernández 3 The weight of colonial cultural legacy in scholarly and political discourses on migration: for a denationalisation of the migration issue 67 Mustapha El Miri PART II BEYOND NATIONAL MIGRATORY DYNAMICS 4 Migration in Italy: a multiscalar analysis 85 Fabio Amato 5 The Maghreb of transit, new laboratory of postcolonial migrations 99 Michel Peraldi 6 Gender and emigration: labour market integration and work‒life balance strategies of young Spanish female migrants to France and Germany 113 Belén Fernández-Suárez and Alberto Capote Lama 7 A Southern European model of migrant agricultural labour: two case studies in Andalusia (Spain) and Calabria (Italy) 130 Francisco Checa y Olmos, Francesco Saverio Caruso and Alessandra Corrado 8 The care shortage and social acceptance: why the welfare needs of native families subvert immigration policies 145 Maurizio Ambrosini 9 Lebanese migration policy since 2011 and its role in the Syrian refugee movement 162 Kamel Doraï and Imad Amer 10 Repoliticising gendered vulnerability: the blind spots of vulnerability-focused humanitarian programmes in Greece 180 Alice Latouche Conclusions: migration patterns across the Mediterranean 195 Adelina Miranda and Antía Pérez-Caramés Index
£85.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Handbook of Migration and Globalisation
Book Synopsis
£210.00
Liverpool University Press Cultures of Mobility and Alterity: Crossing the
Book SynopsisAdvancing public dialogue surrounding the issues of migrants and refugees, the volume explores the dynamic representations of the recent movement of people from and through the Balkans. It investigates how people within the Balkans view their others, how the West regards the Balkans, and how emigrants from the Balkans reflect upon their experiences as members of cosmopolitan diasporic communities. Highlighting latent tensions between center and periphery and furthering the discussion of racialization related to the Balkans, the collection exposes contradictions in social values, which give rise to national anxieties. Approaching mobility from multiple disciplines, the volume examines several instances of border flows in media, literature, and culture in general, flows of ideas and people. To analyze mobility to, from, and in the Balkans requires one to address the issue of difference, otherness, and race as it relates to South East Europe and as it is understood and reproduced in both transnational and local forms. The racialized category of “migrant” necessitates an understanding of how transnational concepts of race translate into constructs of whiteness and blackness and inform subject positions of the individual and motivate discourses of racialization within communities.
£95.00
Liverpool University Press Migrant Frontiers: Race and Mobility in the
Book SynopsisThis book examines today’s massive migrations between Global South and Global North in light of Spain and Portugal’s complicated colonial legacies. It offers unique material on Spanish-speaking and Lusophone Africa in conjunction to transatlantic and transpacific perspectives encompassing the Americas, Asia, and the Caribbean. For the first time, these are brought together to explore how movement within and beyond these former metropoles came to define the Iberian Peninsula. The collection is composed of papers that study human mobility in Spanish-speaking or Lusophone contexts from a myriad of approaches. The project thus sheds critical light on migratory movement within the Luso-Hispanic world, and also beyond its traditional geo-linguistic parameters, through an eclectic and inter-disciplinary collection of essays, traversing anthropology, literary studies, theater, and popular culture. Beyond focusing solely on the geo-political limits of Peninsular space, several essays interrogate the legacies of Iberian colonial projects in a global perspective, and how the discursive underpinnings of these impact the politics of migration in the broader Luso-Hispanic world.Table of ContentsPreface: Coloniality, Racism, and Migrations by Walter D. Mignolo Introduction by Anna Tybinko, Lamonte Aidoo, Daniel F. Silva Part I. Migration and Racialization Where the Atlantic and Pacific Meet Chapter 1. Unseen Diasporas: Portuguese Labor Migrants in Colonial Plantations by Cristiana Bastos Chapter 2. Emigration, Anarchism and Ecology in Ferreira de Castro’s Emigrants by Patrícia Vieira Chapter 3. Filipinx Negrito: Black Mestizaje and Transpacific Intimacies in Jessica Hagedorn’s Dogeaters and José Rizal’s Filipinas dentro de cien años by Sony Coráñez Bolton Part II. Iberian Colonial Settlement, Memory, and Postcolonial Knowleges Chapter 4. The African City: Space, Borders and Identities by Barbara Fraticelli Chapter 5. Crossing Borders, Bodies, and Time: a Luso-Hispanic Dialogue on (Post)Colonial Interracial Liaisons by Sandra I. Sousa Chapter 6. The Peripheral Subject in Welket Bungué’s Films by Inês Cordeiro Dias Part III. Anti-Blackness and Migration on the Iberian Peninsula Chapter 7. Race and Fortress Europe in Ozkar Galán's Castigat ridendo mores by Jeffrey Coleman Chapter 8. Vidas negras importam: Debates on Blackness, Belonging, and Racial Violence in Portugal by Anna Mester Chapter 9. Liminal Inclusions: Black Portuguese Footballers, Portuguese Multiculturalism, and Migrant Epistemologies by Daniel F. Silva Part IV. Precarity and Displacement in African Migrant Literature in Spain Chapter 10. All That Glitters: Questioning the Spanish El Dorado through Rachid Nini’s and Donato Ndongo-Bidyogo’s Narratives of Migration by Anna Tybinko Chapter 11. The Incestuous Embodiment of Immigration and Identity: La filla estrangera by Najat El Hachmi by Jessica Folkart Chapter 12. Writing from the Displacement: Najat El Hachmi and Global Literature by Lucía Hellín Nistal
£110.00
Liverpool University Press Refugees and Forced Displacement in Northern
Book SynopsisThough forced displacement constituted a central and pervasive feature of the Northern Ireland ‘Troubles’ effecting tens of thousands of citizens, remarkably it has been afforded little more than a footnote or fleeting reference in most accounts of the conflict. This book seeks to ‘end the silence’ surrounding this neglected and ubiquitous aspect of the conflict. Based on 88 in-depth qualitative interviews with victims and survivors, and extensive secondary research, this fascinating study provides the first comprehensive examination of forced displacement in Northern Ireland. The analysis presented captures the unique perspectives of those forcibly uprooted over the course of the 30-year conflict and places on historical record their stories and experiences. This thought-provoking work challenges and broadens prevailing understandings of conflict-related violence, harm, and loss in Northern Ireland to demonstrate the centrality of forced movement, territory, and demographics to the roots and subsequent trajectory of the Troubles. In doing so, it shows that to fully understand the eruption and outplaying of the Troubles and its elusive peace, engagement with and understanding of the legacy of forced displacement is crucial.Trade Review'This book makes a significant contribution to the literature in the field and that there is no doubt that it helps to plug a substantial gap in the debate about the Troubles and their legacy.' Dr Patrick Fitzgerald, Head of Research and Development at The Mellon Centre for Migration Studies.'This book makes a significant contribution to the literature in the field and that there is no doubt that it helps to plug a substantial gap in the debate about the Troubles and their legacy.' Dr Patrick Fitzgerald, Head of Research and Development at The Mellon Centre for Migration Studies.‘The authors complement their sound theoretical framework with a rich variety of testimony of first-hand accounts of those who left their homes… thoroughly researched and well-presented.’ Allan Leonard, Shared Future NewsTable of ContentsAcknowledgements Maps CHAPTER ONE – INTRODUCTION: THE SILENCE OF WAR CHAPTER TWO – FORMATIONS OF INTIMIDATION, FEAR AND FLIGHT CHAPTER THREE – EVACUATION, EXILE AND RESETTLEMENT CHAPTER FOUR – RUPTURED LIVES: HARMS, LOSS & GRIEVANCES CHAPTER FIVE – ADDRESSING THE LEGACY OF DISPLACEMENT CHAPTER SIX – CONCLUSION Bibliography Index
£95.00
Liverpool University Press Violent Loyalties: Manliness, Migration, and the
Book SynopsisBeing an Irish man was a consistent, contentious issue in the Canadas. The aim of this book is to provide the first gendered examination of male Irish migration to Upper and Lower Canada within the broader contexts of negative stereotypes about Irish violence and Irishmen’s questionable loyalty to the British Empire. Through examinations of key violent episodes and (in)famous individuals, Violent Loyalties argues that being an Irishman in the Canadas meant daily negotiations with discrimination, ethnic rivalries, the pressure to become more ‘British’, and having to base one’s sense of manliness on being the most visible ‘other’ in the colonies. Irish Catholics faced the burden of being dual minorities – the ‘other’ religion within the Anglophone world and English-speaking in the Catholic sphere already established by French-Canadians. Irish Protestants also had difficulties adapting to their new communities, as the problematic association with violent Orangeism and rivalries with Scottish and English immigrants, many of whom were United Empire Loyalists, created obstacles in the quest for upward social mobility. Both Canadian and Irish historiographies are sorely lacking in examinations of masculinity compared with those investigating American, French, Australian, or British manliness. This gap in the literature becomes even more apparent outside of a twentieth-century focus. Violent Loyalties aims to fill these lacunae in the histories of colonial Canada and the Irish diaspora.Trade Review'A novel and significant contribution to studies of the Irish diaspora in Canada.'Dr William Jenkins, York University, Canada'[Violent Loyalties] is full of cracking stories. This narrative flair is intercut throughout with theoretical buttressing, where the ideas of Judith Butler, Joan Scott and others provide a framework for an innovative account of this period in Canadian history that is thoroughly engaged with transnational and empire perspectives.' Jim MacPherson, Canadian Journal of Irish Studies‘With a strong sense of scholarly analysis and yet a fluency and anecdotal vigour that will appeal to many readers, Violent Loyalties provides much-needed insight into White settler masculinities during a formational part of central Canada’s colonial past… [McGaughey’s] work in the archives has been masterful and wide-ranging; what she has done with this evidence is pioneering, with excellent work in reading across the grain for insights on gender… this is an excellent piece of scholarship and highly deserving of our consideration. I hope to see it adopted in academic curricula in both Irish and Gender History/Studies.’ Willeen Keough, Histoire sociale/Social HistoryTable of ContentsIntroduction1. Bodies of Men2. Wanted? Coming to the Canadas, 1798-18303. The Irish Hero4. Ogle Gowan and Orangeism in Upper Canada5. Shiners on the River6. Irish Patriotes7. Dismemberment at Windmill PointConclusion
£29.99
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd The Elgar Companion to Gender and Global
Book SynopsisThis timely Companion traces the interlinking histories of globalisation, gender, and migration in the 21st century, setting up a completely new agenda beyond Western research production. Natalia Ribas-Mateos and Saskia Sassen bring together 27 incisive contributions from leading international experts on gender and global migration, uncovering the multitude of economies, histories, families and working cultures in which local, regional, national, and global economies are embedded. Examining recent migratory flows and changing migration corridors across the globe, the Companion offers critical insights into the wider dynamics that compel people to migrate. Chapters address key topics relating to gender and global migration, from global cities and border regions, internal displacements, and humanitarian risks, to the changing face of care chains and labour, pandemic mobilities, expulsions from climate change and the weight of critical historical colonial studies in contemporary feminisms. The volume further explores extractivism, colonial images, the agrifood industry, qualified labour, remittances, cross-border trade, and extreme violence. Advancing a compelling range of forward-looking perspectives, this dynamic Companion establishes a novel agenda for future research on gender and global migration. Integrating empirical case studies with cutting-edge theory, The Elgar Companion to Gender and Global Migration will be an invaluable resource for a multidisciplinary audience of scholars across sociology, anthropology, geography, economics and political science, as well as migration and gender studies. Its themes will also be of significant interest to policymakers, administrators and grassroots organisations involved in emerging topics in migration studies.Trade Review‘Firmly anchored in critical analysis of women’s migration under 1980s neoliberal globalization and stretching into twenty-first century displacements, violence and migration-care regimes, this volume brings together inquiries spanning across parts of Europe, Latin America, the Middle East, Asia and Africa. A must read for those seeking new approaches to gender and migration.’ -- Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo, University of Southern California, US‘The editors, both renowned migration and gender scholars, have assembled a hugely impressive array of authors to rethink the global narratives which structure our understanding of gender and migration. Especially innovative is the focus on non-Western settings wherein are explored a wide range of intersecting themes: migration, mobilities, displacement, gender, human rights, development, transnational care, and many more. This is a must-read for students of gendered migrations.’ -- Russell King, University of Sussex, UKTable of ContentsContents: 1 Introduction to The Elgar Companion to Gender and Global Migration 1 Natalia Ribas-Mateos and Saskia Sassen PART I BACKGROUND 2 A state-of-the-art review and future directions in gender and migration research 24 Laura Lamas-Abraira 3 Revisiting the gender, migration and development nexus through the circulation of assets approach 38 Laura Oso 4 The absent image of women: lacunae in the legacy of French colonial mobilities 49 Natalia Ribas-Mateos PART II LATIN AMERICA 5 Extractivism, forced gendered migration and resistance in Latin America and the Caribbean 84 María del Carmen Villarreal and Enara Muñoz 6 Women and punishment in Abya Yala 97 Elisabet Almeda Samaranch, Clara Camps Calvet and Dino Di Nella 7 Scientific mobilities in the twentieth century: Gustaf Bolinder’s photographs of indigenous women in the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta 109 Alexandra Martínez 8 Embodying ethnic and labor relations: indigenous women and US– Mexico labor mobility circuits in the agrifood industry 124 Laura Velasco Ortiz 9 Desértica feminista: collision of theories, identity, and [im]migrant– border encounters 133 Eugenia Hernández Sánchez and Cynthia Bejarano 10 Women’s mobilities: a blacklight on gender and care in the Amazon 147 José Miguel Nieto Olivar, Fabio Magalhães Candotti and Flávia Melo 11 Lack of opportunities for indigenous young women in Guatemala: forced mobility and absence of social protection systems 161 Aracely Martínez Rodas, Ángel del Valle and Ramón Zamora PART III ASIA 12 A study of the lives of internally displaced women after the Fukushima disaster 172 Anne Gonon 13 Chinese internal migration dynamics as a way of understanding globalization and gender 180 Amelia Sáiz López 14 Shifting migrant categories and recast boundaries in China: transnational women in family migration 187 Chieh Hsu 15 Qualified Brazilian migrant women in Dubai: constraints, agency, and change in the migratory process 196 Raquel Nazário Motta, Marcos Linhares Goes and Jorge Malheiros 16 In the eye of the storm: Afghan women and girls navigating displacement 211 Mandana Hendessi 17 Gender conflict and forced migration in India: human rights perspectives 221 Rita Machanda 18 Remittances, migration and economic abuse: ‘invisible in plain sight’ 232 Supriya Singh and Jasvinder Sidhu PART IV AFRICA 19 Women and cross-border trade between Angola and the Democratic Republic of the Congo 240 Asaf Augusto and Lesley Braun 20 The Anglophone crisis and migratory patterns in Cameroon: some social and economic implications for women 253 Tassah Ivo Tawe and Henri Yambene Bomono 21 Humanitarian tropes in the Casamance: presumptions about gender-based violence in conflict and displacement contexts 264 Markus Rudolf PART V THE MEDITERRANEAN 22 Missing in the Mediterranean: a perspective from Tunisian mothers 277 Sofia Stimmatini and Constance De Gourcy 23 Origins of extreme violence in Palermo: health (infectious) impact of the trans-Saharan/Mediterranean route for women on the move 286 Tullio Prestileo and Natalia Ribas-Mateos 24 Gender and humanitarian issues in transitional shelter processes: the cases of Syrian refugees and displaced communities by the earthquake in Haiti 300 Patricia Muñiz and Luciano G. Alfaya 25 Sub-Saharan and Syrian women’s embodying migration experiences in Casablanca 310 Fadma Ait Mous, Sana Benbelli and Sarah Ettallab PART VI EUROPE 26 Globalization and health: gender issues in temporary agricultural work (Huelva) 323 Angels Escrivà 27 Squatting in a “home”: intersectional struggles of migrant women in Lucha y Siesta (Rome) 333 Chiara Denaro Index
£192.00
Edward Elgar Publishing The Elgar Companion to Migration and the
Book Synopsis
£205.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Migration Mobility and the Creative Class
Book Synopsis
£85.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Research Handbook on Migration, Gender, and
Book SynopsisDrawing together the latest research on migration, gender and COVID-19, this erudite Research Handbook contributes to a better understanding of the immediate and longer-term implications of the pandemic on gender dynamics and roles in international migration. Providing a wealth of expert critical analysis, it considers post-COVID-19 realities and assesses the future scope of research in this interdisciplinary field of study.Capturing multi-disciplinary insights and diverse geographies, the Research Handbook explores migration in all of its facets, from displacement and internal and international mobility to return migration and labour mobility. Chapters address topical issues relating to the policy and programmatic implications of the COVID-19 pandemic for migration and migrants from a gender perspective. Marie McAuliffe and Céline Bauloz, alongside leading researchers and academics, present a major contribution to scholarly inquiry which is crucial for informing inclusive and sustainable responses to improve migrants’ wellbeing and protection.Offering a state-of-the-art review of the implications of COVID-19 on migration through the lens of gender, this Research Handbook will provide a thought-provoking resource for students and researchers in demography, migration studies, geography, political science, sociology and international law. Its critical examination of policy and programmatic interventions designed to address gender inequalities in migration will also be of significant interest to policymakers and practitioners.Trade Review‘COVID-19 has had a profound effect on migration dynamics, leaving an indelible mark on the world. This exceptional volume explores complex interplays between COVID-19, migration processes, and gender, offering invaluable insights across an array of global contexts. It is an essential resource for understanding the pandemic’s far-reaching consequences.’ -- Steven Vertovec, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, GermanyTable of ContentsContents: 1 Migration, gender and COVID-19: an overview 1 Marie McAuliffe and Céline Bauloz, PART I (MIS)UNDERSTANDING THE IMPACTS: MIGRATION AND GENDER RESEARCH & ANALYSIS 2 Researching Afghan women’s mobility decisions during COVID-19 and multiple crises – stayers or left behind? 17 Nassim Majidi and Katherine James 3 The ‘covidisation’ of migration and health research: understanding the implications of the pandemic for the field 34 Thea de Gruchy, Jo Vearey, Kavita Datta, Elaine Chase and Linda Musariri,, 4 COVID-19 and the intersections of gender, migration status, work and place 48 Denise Spitzer PART II GENDER IMPLICATIONS OF MOVING DURING COVID-19 5 Internal migration, informal work, and the COVID-19 pandemic: city-level insights on intersecting vulnerabilities 64 Marcela Valdivia and Ghida Ismail 6 Gendered impacts on internal migrant workers in the informal economy in India 83 Megan Schmidt-Sane, Mihir Bhatt, Mehul Pandya and Lyla Mehta 7 Migration of Venezuelan and Haitian women in Brazil during the COVID-19 pandemic: outlooks, gender, and governance 95 Roberto Rodolfo Georg Uebel 8 Intersectionality, violence, and migration during COVID-19: women on the move in Central America 109 Adriana Salcedo 9 Gendered impacts of COVID-19 on international students in Korea 123 Taehoon Lee and Sang Hyun Park PART III DESTINATION COMPLEXITIES OF MOBILITY AND IMMOBILITY 10 Care as relational practice: Filipino migrant workers creating communities of care under COVID-19 141 Valerie Francisco-Menchavez, Tanya Yared, Edwin Carlos and Maria Renee Zapata 11 Syrian refugees in Lebanon: gendered impacts of a multi-layered crisis 154 Irene Tuzi and Weam Ghabash 12 Gendered control over space in migrant housing 168 Mastoureh Fathi 13 Pandemic precarity, crisis-living, and food insecurity: female Zimbabwean migrants in South Africa 180 Sujata Ramachandran, Jonathan Crush, Godfrey Tawodzera and Elizabeth Opiyo Onyango 14 By the wayside: gender dimensions of stranded migrants during the COVID-19 crisis 196 Marie McAuliffe PART IV RETURN MIGRATION AND REINTEGRATION IMPACTS 15 Pre-pandemic mobility: uncoupling gendered return migration and COVID-19 in Zimbabwe 213 Rose Jaji 16 Impact of COVID-19 on women migrant workers: case of domestic workers in the South Asia–Gulf corridor 225 S. Irudaya Rajan and Rakkee Thimothy 17 Return migration and women’s empowerment: the implications of the COVID-19 pandemic in return migrant households 239 Céline Bauloz and Jenna Blower-Nassiri 18 Understanding return migration from the Gulf to East Africa during crisis: youth and gender dimensions 259 Adrian Kitimbo PART V MIGRATION AND GENDER IN A POST COVID-19 WORLD 19 COVID-19 vaccine access and the intersection of gender and displacement 278 Katharine M. Donato, Elizabeth Ferris, Shuait Nair, Erin M. Sorrell and Claire J. Standley 20 Changing practices of providing (financial) care: gender, digital access and remittances during COVID-19 291 Iris Lim and Kavita Datta 21 One step forward, two steps back: pandemic policy responses and the gendered implications for women and LGBTQI+ migrants 309 Jenna Hennebry and Hari KC 22 The impacts of COVID-19 and coup on Myanmar migrant children’s education in Thailand 325 Pyone Myat Thu and Premjai Vungsiriphisal 23 Addressing irregularity and combating vulnerabilities: regularisation programmes implemented during and as a result of COVID-19 344 Pablo Rojas Coppari and Samuel Poirier Index
£200.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Welfare Chauvinism in Europe: How Education,
Book SynopsisThe redistribution of welfare resources to migrants continues to polarise society. Not only politicians from the radical right but also from more mainstream parties are capitalising on the idea of ‘welfare for our kind’, or welfare chauvinism. In this innovative book, Gianna Maria Eick provides a comprehensive analysis of welfare chauvinism in Europe, skilfully exploring how it is shaped by education, economy and culture.Constructing an extensive overview of welfare chauvinism’s causes and consequences, Welfare Chauvinism in Europe sheds light on the multidimensionality of welfare chauvinist attitudes across countries, time, social policies, and different migrant groups. Eick unveils hidden nuances regarding welfare chauvinism that are frequently overlooked in current discourse, particularly concerning socioeconomic cleavages in Europe. Using high-quality data on public attitudes and macro-level conditions, this thought-provoking book investigates the common misperception that higher levels of education universally lead to more tolerant attitudes and argues that governments and welfare institutions play a crucial role in shaping public opinion.Providing an in-depth exploration of welfare chauvinism, this timely book is a crucial resource for academics, researchers and students working across social policy, political science, sociology, social work, geography, economics and law. Its analysis of novel cross-national survey data on welfare chauvinism is also of significant intere– Martin Ruhs, European University Institust to policy makers and policy practitioners across the globe.Trade Review‘Gianna Maria Eick guides the reader expertly through the complex nature of welfare chauvinism, across a decade when European societies came under economic and political stress. By separating empirical patterns from erroneous assumptions this book provides rich insights to established scholars as well as newcomers to the field.’ -- Tom van der Meer, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands‘In this excellent book, Gianna Maria Eick provides novel analysis of why some Europeans want to exclude migrants from access to “their” national welfare states. Her nuanced study of the role of education and national contexts in shaping welfare chauvinism is a thought-provoking and highly recommended read for all those working in the fields of migration, welfare states, and European integration.’ -- Martin Ruhs, European University Institute, Italy‘With migrant populations rising across Europe, welfare chauvinism - the desire to exclude migrants from social safety nets - has become one of the great political issues of our time. Why do native citizens shun migrants in this way, and what can be done to build more inclusive welfare systems? This outstanding new book from Gianna Maria Eick brings a wealth of new data and analysis to bear on these important questions. Required reading for anyone interested in how to build welfare states fit for a diverse and mobile world.’ -- Robert Ford, University of Manchester, UK‘Gianna Maria Eick provides a comprehensive yet nuanced picture of the empirical relationship between higher education and welfare chauvinism and in doing so challenges the notion that higher education unfailingly bestows individuals with liberal sociopolitical attitudes. Her analyses reveal that countries’ economic conditions, cultural norms, and welfare state institutions affect the size of the educational gap, thereby limiting higher education’s liberalizing potential. These findings have implications not only for our understanding of higher education’s so-called liberalizing effects but also the determinants of welfare chauvinism. A timely read for scholars of comparative welfare states in an era of increased immigration and neo-nationalism.’ -- Maureen A. Eger, Umeå University, Sweden‘Through rigorous analyses of survey data, Gianna Maria Eick nuances our understanding of public opinion towards denying migrants access to welfare provisions. Most centrally, she demonstrates that welfare chauvinism is also found among the higher educated and that the “enlightenment-effect” is absent in some European contexts. The book also highlights patterns in public opinion that could pave the way for more inclusive welfare states. Do not read this book if you want a sweeping statement. Read this book if you want to understand under which conditions the public wants to deny, and give, migrants access to welfare provisions.’ -- Christian Albrekt Larsen, Aalborg University, Denmark‘The tension between migration and welfare is at the heart of current political conflicts. In her book, Gianna Maria Eick provides a profound and nuanced account of the scope of solidarity and the willingness to include “others” by looking at educational cleavages as well as their cross-national and temporal variations.’ -- Steffen Mau, Humboldt University of Berlin, GermanyTable of ContentsContents: Preface and acknowledgements 1 Migration, welfare and education in times of crisis 2 What is welfare chauvinism? 3 Explanations for welfare chauvinism in the public 4 Welfare chauvinism across countries 5 Welfare chauvinism across time 6 Welfare chauvinism across policies 7 The future of European welfare states Bibliography Index
£80.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Assessing the Social Impact of Immigration in
Book SynopsisFocusing on the social impact of migration, this book explores migration as an inevitable part of rural development and transition in light of the sharp political divides in European and national political arenas on the topic. It provides an innovative immigration impact assessment based on recently conducted empirical work to enhance local development in European rural and remote regions, looking to promote change in the perception of migration and related policies and practices.The book concentrates on third country nationals (TCNs), considering the spaces in which TCNs settle down as both the input and output of a process of collective production of places. Chapters analyse how the particular traits of rural and remote contexts interact with TCNs’ integration paths and impact, looking at how demographic trends, socio-economic dynamics and migration patterns to a specific region affect the opportunities, policy responses, societal attitudes and perceptions towards TCNs.With empirically grounded recommendations and advice on strategies and solutions to improve the local governance of migration, this book will be a useful tool for European policymakers. It will also be an informative and interesting read for regional studies, governance and human geography scholars focusing on migration.Trade Review‘With this book, the researchers of the MATILDE project fill an important research gap. Through the diversity of the case studies, the range of opportunities and challenges experienced in remote areas through third-country nationals are impressively exemplified. The book is a valuable addition to the literature, especially for migration studies and rural studies.’ -- Birte Nienaber, University of Luxembourg, LuxembourgTable of ContentsContents: 1 On the potential of immigration for the remote areas of Europe: an introduction 1 Jussi P. Laine, Daniel Rauhut and Marika Gruber PART I RECOGNITION, RENEGOTIATION, REVITALISATION 2 Appropriate housing in rural and mountain areas? Current structures and practices of access for immigrants – the case of Alpine regions in Austria and Germany 27 Stefan Kordel, Tobias Weidinger, Ingrid Machold and Marika Gruber 3 Labour market shortages and exclusion practices: the irrationalities of the labour markets and the legislation 44 Marika Gruber, Kathrin Zupan, Nuria del Olmo Vicén and Raúl Lardiés-Bosque 4 Long-term needs to achieve social inclusionary pathways for migrants 60 Ingrid Machold, Thomas Dax and Lisa Bauchinger 5 Russian-speaking immigrants’ vulnerable transnational family lives on the border: the case of North Karelia 77 Pirjo Pöllänen, Lauri Havukainen and Olga Davydova-Minguet 6 De/re/bordering remoteness in times of crisis: migration for reterritorialization and revitalization of a remote region 93 Anna Krasteva 7 Migrating to Scottish insular communities: how remoteness affects integration by shaping borders and identities 111 Maria Luisa Caputo, Michele Bianchi and Simone Baglioni PART II CHALLENGES FOR POLICY AND GOVERNANCE 8 The impact of foreign immigrants on the revitalization of rural areas in Spain 130 Raúl Lardiés-Bosque and Nuria del Olmo Vicén 9 Access to welfare policies by immigrants: comparing centralized and decentralized governance in the examples of Turkey and Spain 149 Põnar Uyan Semerci, Fatma Yõlmaz Elmas, Raœl LardiŽs Bosque and Nuria Del Olmo-Vicén 10 The local turn in migrant practices in Turkey: Syrians in Bursa 166 Ayhan Kaya 11 Immigrant integration in Austria and Sweden: a patchwork of multilevel governance and fragmented responsibilities 183 Marika Gruber and Daniel Rauhut 12 ‘A spanner in the works’: exploring the relationship between provision of welfare and integration in rural areas 201 Susanne Stenbacka and Tina Mathisen 13 Structures, trends and turning points of Norwegian and Swedish integration policies 218 Ulf Hansson, Akin Deniz, Zuzana Macuchova and Per Olav Lund 14 Conclusions: renegotiated remoteness and the social impact of immigration 237 Daniel Rauhut, Jussi P. Laine and Marika Gruber Index
£105.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd New Methods and Theory on Immigrant Integration:
Book SynopsisLooking beyond urban immigration, this ground-breaking book explores how immigrants can become a part of local communities in remote regions. Contributors argue that immigrant integration is place-dependent, and develop new theories, methodologies, and policies that address the specific dynamics of immigration to peripheral areas.Emphasising migrants’ attachments to the places they reside in, this book adopts a bottom-up approach to immigrant integration, prioritising the needs of individual agents. It highlights the various methodological flaws and ideological biases of existing theories of integration and provides novel solutions to integration problems. Chapters examine key features of immigration to remote places, including transnational social networks developed by migrants, and translocal and global understandings of place. Ultimately, the book reveals the multi-faceted, multi-layered and socially-constructed nature of immigrant integration.New Methods and Theory on Immigrant Integration will be an invaluable resource for students and scholars in international migration, human geography, ethnic relations, European studies, and sociology. It will also be essential reading for professionals in NGOs and political institutions seeking to develop effective immigration integration policies.Trade Review‘In our day and age, when migrants in the West are no longer confined to cities and metropoles, but also increasingly make their mark in the countryside and small towns, there is a dire need for scholarly research on migration outside urban areas. Wait no more. In Daniel Rauhut’s New Methods and Theory on Immigration Integration, all those sorely overlooked topics are carefully analyzed from refreshing perspectives by distinguished scholars in the field. Along with it, conventional wisdom is being challenged. Certainly, an extremely valuable research and teaching resource!’ -- Göran Adamson, Uppsala University, SwedenTable of ContentsContents: Preface ix 1 Methodological and theoretical perspectives on immigrant integration in rural and remote areas: an introduction 1 Daniel Rauhut 2 Theorising immigrant integration: a critical examination 13 Daniel Rauhut and Jussi P. Laine 3 Integration and rural space in Sweden: a three-dimensional approach 33 Susanne Stenbacka 4 Integrating remote places: a place-based perspective on integration in the Scottish Outer Hebrides 51 Maria Luisa Caputo, Michele Bianchi, and Simone Baglioni 5 Crossing the border: immigrant integration in a bordering perspective 68 Daniel Rauhut and Jussi P. Laine 6 Transcultural and post-migrant evidence in rural Carinthia: a conceptual approach 86 Marika Gruber 7 Subjective perceptions of immigrant integration: an example from rural Spain 104 Raúl Lardiés-Bosque and Nuria del Olmo-Vicén 8 Measuring immigrant integration – determining how, what, and who 123 Zuzana Macuchova and Daniel Rauhut 9 The methodology of immigrant integration: an epistemological perspective 142 Daniel Rauhut 10 Epilogue: what is lurking behind migrant integration? 163 Ayhan Kaya Index
£90.00
Emerald Publishing Limited Borders and Barriers
Book SynopsisIn Borders and Barriers, Agneta Moulettes engages critical management and postcolonial theories, questioning prevailing perspectives and scrutinizing policies promoting assimilation, immigrants' economic roles, and the dehumanization of minority groups.
£45.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Handbook of Return Migration
Book SynopsisThis authoritative Handbook provides an interdisciplinary appraisal of the field of return migration, advancing concepts and theories and setting an agenda for new debates. Structured into four parts, the Handbook maps the contemporary field of return migration, examining the effects and politicisation of return migration, before moving on to explore the theme of reintegration and the impact of return migration on development in the migrants’ countries of origin. Taking an intersectional approach, expert contributors delve into the economics of return migration, deportation, the psychological wellbeing of migrants, student mobility and second-generation ‘return’ migration. The Handbook opens up new avenues for research, including new theories and conceptualisations of return migration, and articulates key issues that should be considered, both for research and for policy and practice. This Handbook will be a valuable resource for scholars and advanced students interested in migration and human rights. Its use of empirical examples and case studies will also be beneficial for policy-makers seeking an insight into the current issues in return migration.Trade Review‘Russell King and Katie Kuschminder have brought together a multidisciplinary team to cover return migration from multiple conceptual, theoretical, empirical and political angles. The volume focuses on the intersection of these approaches to provide a general but also detailed survey of the field. Given the multidisciplinary nature of this collection, this volume will be useful across the field of migration studies as well as within the specific discipline approach of each individual chapter. In particular, scholars and practitioners working in the area of migration and ethics, especially human rights, should find this collection valuable.’ -- James Barry, Ethnic and Racial Studies‘Return migration used to be the Cinderella of migration studies. This Handbook is an indispensable corrective, containing a marvellously rich and diverse collection of case studies together with a “state of the art” review of the relevant literature by the editors.’ -- Robin Cohen, University of Oxford, UK‘In this collection of eye-opening contributions on return migration, Russell King and Katie Kuschminder have assembled a highly productive group of authors who give guidance in this quickly emerging field. The contributions convincingly employ insights from various branches of migration and mobility studies, and establish new ground in topics ranging from assisted return and deportations to reintegration and engagement in local development. The individual chapters draw a differentiated portrait of a crucial but so far underappreciated dimension of migration. We have waited a long time for such a truly stimulating Handbook.’ -- Thomas Faist, Bielefeld University, GermanyTable of ContentsContents: 1 Introduction: definitions, typologies and theories of return migration 1 Russell King and Katie Kuschminder PART I THEORISING AND CONCEPTUALISING RETURN MIGRATION 2 The economics of return migration 24 Jackline Wahba 3 Return and transnationalism 38 Özge Bilgili 4 Gendering return migration 53 Russell King and Aija Lulle 5 Theorising voluntariness in return 70 Marta Bivand Erdal and Ceri Oeppen 6 Departheid: re-politicising the inhumane treatment of illegalised migrants in so-called liberal democratic states 84 Barak Kalir 7 Return visits and other return mobilities 96 Md Farid Miah PART II THE POLITICISATION OF RETURN MIGRATION 8 Critical reflections on assisted return programmes and practices 108 Ine Lietaert 9 The contours of deportation studies 122 Martin Lemberg-Pedersen 10 The Return Directive: clarifying the scope and substance of the rights of migrants facing expulsion from the EU 137 Alan Desmond 11 The return industry: the case of the Netherlands 153 Marieke van Houte 12 The legitimisation of the policy objective of sustainable reintegration 167 Rossella Marino and Ine Lietaert 13 Corruption and return migration 185 Erlend Paasche PART III EXPERIENCES OF RETURN AND REINTEGRATION 14 Reintegration strategies 200 Katie Kuschminder 15 Labour migrants and the retirement–return nexus 212 Claudio Bolzman 16 Return migration and psychosocial wellbeing 226 Zana Vathi 17 The return migration of children: (re)integration is not always plain sailing 241 Daina Grosa 18 Student mobility: between returning home and remaining abroad 255 Elisa Alves 19 Returning lifestyle migrants 270 Katie Walsh 20 Revisiting second-generation ‘return’ migration to the ancestral homeland 283 Nilay Kılınç 21 Return migration experiences: the case of Central and Eastern Europe 299 Anne White PART IV RETURN MIGRATION AND DEVELOPMENT 22 Exploring the return migration and development nexus 314 Russell King 23 Diaspora return and knowledge transfer 331 Charlotte Mueller 24 Return migration, entrepreneurship and development 344 Giulia Sinatti Index
£187.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Research Handbook on International Migration and
Book SynopsisThis forward-looking Research Handbook showcases cutting-edge research on the relationship between international migration and digital technology. It sheds new light on the interlinkages between digitalisation and migration patterns and processes globally, capturing the latest research technologies and data sources.Featuring international migration in all facets from the migration of tech sector specialists through to refugee displacement, leading contributors offer strategic insights into the future of migration and mobility. Covering diverse geographies and using interdisciplinary approaches, contributions provide new analysis of migration futures. A discrete chapter on digital technology and COVID-19 global pandemic offers reflections on how migration and mobility are being profoundly reshaped by the global pandemic. The practical applications and limitations of digital technology in relation to international migration are also highlighted and supported with key case studies. Analytical yet accessible, this Research Handbook will be an invaluable resource for students and scholars in the fields of migration and digital technology, while also being of benefit to policy makers and civil society actors specialising in migration.Trade Review‘A pioneer Research Handbook in a burgeoning field mapping the multifaceted interlinkages between international migration and digital technology. This edited volume fills a huge gap in the current literature, providing the state of the art and exploring future avenues to better understand the profound impact of digital transformations upon the processes, patterns and politics of migration. While offering a rich array of topics, perspectives and disciplines, this Research Handbook illuminates the complexities and controversies surrounding digital technology as a facilitator and a disruptor of international migration. The reader will find insightful analyses of many topical issues, including the use of digital technology in migration research and analysis, its role as a tool of empowerment and agency of migrants across the migration cycle, the digitalization and automation of border control and population surveillance, and the spread of disinformation in the public debate. A must-read for anyone interested in the cutting-edge issues associated with migration and digital technology.’ -- Vincent Chetail, Graduate Institute, Switzerland‘This book is a must-read for everyone interested in the intersection between migration and digitalization. As the volume of data grows from expanding forms of technology, the implications for understanding migration are wide-ranging. Impressive in scope, this book offers us a lens for examining how data-driven technologies are reshaping migration in fundamental ways.’ -- Katharine M. Donato, Institute for the Study of International Migration, Georgetown University, US‘This Research Handbook is a major advance in the study of the relationship between international migration and digital technology. Not only does it powerfully synthesize an emerging and hugely important field of research, but it also establishes new agendas for future enquiry.’ -- Andrew Geddes, European University Institute, Italy'This is a much-needed Research Handbook on how the rapid evolution of digital technologies is changing international migration pathways and policies. Contributions to this volume highlight the challenges of advanced technologies for human rights violations, as well as the possibilities they open up for migrant connectivity across time and space. A must-have for students, researchers and media and policy professionals working in this field.' -- Anna Triandafyllidou, Toronto Metropolitan University, CanadaTable of ContentsContents: 1 International migration and digital technology: an overview 1 Marie McAuliffe PART I UNDERSTANDING MIGRATION PATTERNS AND PROCESSES: DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY AND MIGRATION RESEARCH AND ANALYSIS 2 Digital migration studies 15 Koen Leurs and Saskia Witteborn 3 Migration stocks and flows: data concepts, availability and comparability 29 Dilek Yildiz and Guy Abel 4 The roles and limitations of data science in understanding international migration flows and human mobility 42 Marie McAuliffe and Adam Sawyer 5 The practice and politics of migration data visualization 58 William Allen 6 Migration networks: applications of network analysis to macroscale migration patterns 70 Valentin Danchev and Mason A. Porter PART II DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY AND THE ACT OF MOVING: (IM)MOBILITY, BARRIERS AND BORDERS 7 Navigating borders/navigating networks: migration, technology and social capital 92 Farah Azhar, Sara Vannini, Bryce Clayton Newell and Ricardo Gomez 8 Mobile data challenges for human mobility analysis and humanitarian response 107 Albert Ali Salah 9 Migrant smuggling and ICT: research advances, prospects and challenges 123 Georgios Papanicolaou, Parisa Diba and Georgios A. Antonopoulos 10 Robots and refugees: the human rights impacts of artificial intelligence and automated decision-making in migration 134 Petra Molnar 11 Drones and border control: an examination of state and non-state actor use of UAVs along borders 152 Rey Koslowski PART III INTEGRATION, REINTEGRATION AND MIGRANTS’ (DIGITAL) (VIRTUAL) (TRANSNATIONAL) IDENTITIES 12 Migrant inclusion 4.0: the role of mobile tech 167 Céline Bauloz 13 Online technology for promoting the inclusion of refugees into higher education: a systematic review of current approaches and developments 182 Franziska Reinhardt, Olga Zlatkin-Troitschanskaia, Roland Happ and Sarah Nell-Müller 14 Using ICTs to be here and not ‘here’: African migrants and religious transnationalism 195 Henrietta Nyamnjoh 15 ICTs and transnational householding: the double burden of polymedia connectivity for international ‘study mothers’ 207 Yang Wang and Sun Sun Lim 16 In support of return and reintegration? A roadmap for a responsible use of technology 220 Nassim Majidi, Camille Kasavan and G. Harindranath PART IV CONNECTIVITY AND MIGRATION: TRENDS AND IMPACTS 17 Technology for engaging and empowering migrant workers 236 Angela Kintominas, Laurie Berg and Bassina Farbenblum 18 Mobile money and financial inclusion of migrants in sub-Saharan Africa 251 Adrian Kitimbo 19 The gender dimensions of technology in the context of migration and displacement: a critical overview 267 Ibrahim L. Saïd 20 Mobility of tech professionals in the world economy: the case of Indian entrepreneurialism in the United States 284 Binod Khadria and Ratnam Mishra 21 Transnational families and technology: trends, impacts and futures 300 Jacqueline Bhabha, Abhishek Bhatia and Sam Peisch PART V MIGRATION, TECHNOLOGY AND PUBLIC DEBATES 22 How online disinformation and far-right activism is shaping public debates on immigration 316 Eileen Culloty and Jane Suiter 23 The role of networked publics in immigration debates 330 Markus Ojala 24 Using new media platforms for human rights advocacy in real-time: people seeking asylum in Nauru and Papua New Guinea 344 Cecilia Cannon and Shaminda Kanapathi PART VI DIGITAL MIGRATION FUTURES 25 Technological transformations in migration processes: spatiality, temporality and agency 361 Huub Dijstelbloem 26 Migration forecasting using new technology and methods 376 Arkadiusz Wiśniowski 27 Ahead of the policy curve: migrants harnessing tech to survive 393 Emre Eren Korkmaz 28 Migration, mobility and digital technology in a post-COVID-19 world: initial reflections on transformations underway 406 Marie McAuliffe and Jenna Blower Index 423
£208.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Migration and Nationalism: Theoretical and
Book SynopsiscThis cutting-edge book presents a unique focus on nationalism and migration, exploring the relationship between these two concepts in countries throughout the world. Combining theoretical and empirical discussions from a range of disciplinary perspectives, the book questions the rise of nationalism in the 21st century instead of simply assuming its ascendancy.Featuring contributions from leading scholars in the field, this book not only conceptualises ethno-nationalism, but also details its effects. From Islamophobia and racism in Europe and North America, to xenophobia in China and South Africa, the book critically examines the many forms of discursive and material exclusions that exist across the globe. Rejecting a simple framework that links the supposed rise of ethno-nationalism to the limits of neoliberalism, it instead argues that nationalism and neoliberalism may in fact be combined. It also considers how this leads to discourses, policies and practices of differential inclusion and exclusion, and vice versa.International and multidisciplinary in scope, Migration and Nationalism will be a beneficial read for academics, researchers and students in politics and public policy, geography, sociology and social policy, urban and regional studies, and development studies. It also will be of benefit to policymakers within these fields.Trade Review‘A particularly impressive contribution by this book is that not only does it greatly enhance understanding of the relationship between immigration and nationalism, but by doing so, it provides important insights into the contemporary condition of societies and politics in Europe and North America and the boundaries of inclusion and exclusion that they maintain and sustain.’ -- Andrew Geddes, European University Institute, Italy‘We cannot separate immigration from nationalism. This book offers fresh insights into this understudied relationship. It helps us understand how populism, right-wing politics, and neoliberalism affect migration policies. To me it shows why the dream of free movement for all seems so distant today.’ -- Harald Bauder, Toronto Metropolitan University, CanadaTable of ContentsContents: 1 Introduction: migration and nationalism 1 Michael Samers and Jens Rydgren PART I THEORETICAL CONTRIBUTIONS 2 Immigration and nationalism in the neoliberal order 31 Christian Joppke 3 In the name of dignity and respect: international migration and the ethnopopulist backlash 51 Hans-Georg Betz PART II COUNTRY-SPECIFIC CONTRIBUTIONS 4 Italy between and beyond geographical and racial divides 70 Marco Antonsich 5 Post-Soviet Russia: anti-immigrant sentiment and discourses of national identity 88 Inna Leykin and Anastasia Gorodzeisky 6 The politics of ethnic nationalism, nostalgia and anti-immigrant framing: the trajectory of the Sweden Democrats 1989–2022 114 Gabriella Elgenius and Jens Rydgren 7 Immigration and nationalism in Japan 134 Naoto Higuchi 8 The nation and its margins: the cultural politics of multiracialism and migration in Singapore 154 Brenda S.A. Yeoh and Theodora Lam 9 How sub-state nationalism and immigrant integration policies entwine over time: a spotlight on Flanders (Belgium) 172 Ilke Adam and Catherine Xhardez 10 Migration and right-wing mobilization in the Czech Republic 195 Lenka Bustikova and Petra Guasti
£105.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Handbook on Migration and Welfare
Book SynopsisBringing together prominent scholars in the field, this Handbook provides an interdisciplinary exploration of the complex interrelationship between migration and welfare. Chapters explore the extent to which immigration policy affects – and is affected by – welfare states, from both economic and political perspectives. This Handbook also examines the effects of emigration on sending societies, exploring issues such as the impact of remittances, diasporas, and skill deterioration as a result of human capital flight on capacity building and on economic and political development more generally. Contributors draw on both qualitative and quantitative research to illuminate the contours and patterns of this complex relationship. This includes the assumed tension-reducing role of multiculturalist and integration policies, the shaping of native beliefs about migrants by socio-economic constraints and the potential for the extension of social rights to migrants to influence and increase pro-redistributive attitudes. Investigating the drivers of welfare chauvinism and its effects on social trust between native and immigrant groups, the Handbook also provides insights into the latest theoretical and empirical findings regarding the progressive’s dilemma, one of the most formidable policy challenges leaders of modern societies face. Breaking new theoretical and empirical ground, this cutting-edge Handbook is essential reading for academics, researchers and students in political science, economics, sociology, social policy and political philosophy, particularly those focused on global migration and changing attitudes to welfare. It will also benefit policymakers looking for new data and pioneering perspectives on immigration policy and the future of welfare states in a changing world economy.Trade Review‘The volume provides an excellent summary of the challenges of migration today and tries to show the dilemmas of both receiving and sending countries. I recommend the volume to all those who wish to conduct research in the field of migration and or who would like to gain more insight into the subject.’ -- Szandra Kramarics, European Journal of Social Security‘Migration and welfare spell an uneasy relationship. Membership and deservingness have come to delineate newcomers' access to social goods in host societies across the globe. Yet there is no unitary relationship between the entities. Context and politics matter. This Handbook delivers a unique set of analyses to grasp these complexities.’ -- Grete Brochmann, University of Oslo, Norway‘This Handbook tackles two of the thorniest questions of the twenty-first century: how do we ensure the collective welfare of others, and who counts as a member of “our” collective? The impressive range of contributions, across disciplines and methodologies, provides a wealth of data and valuable ideas for scholars and those who are making critical policy decisions about who gets what in the coming decades.’ -- Irene Bloemraad, University of California Berkeley, USTable of ContentsContents: Introduction to the Handbook on Migration and Welfare: The contours of contested concepts 1 Markus M. L. Crepaz PART I TAKING STOCK: MIGRATION AND THE STATE OF THE WELFARE STATE 1 Managing migration in modern welfare states: One-size policy does not fit all 13 Pieter Bevelander and James F. Hollifield 2 Economics or politics? Assessing immigration as a challenge to the welfare state 45 Maureen A. Eger 3 Migration, diversity, and the welfare state: Moving beyond attitudes 64 Patrick R. Ireland PART II IS SOCIAL HOMOGENEITY A PRECONDITION FOR REDISTRIBUTION? 4 Why share with strangers? Reflections on a variety of perspectives 87 Matthew Wright 5 The boundaries of generosity: Membership, inclusion, and redistribution 102 Allison Harell, Will Kymlicka, and Keith Banting 6 Immigration and preferences for redistribution: Empirical evidence and political implications of the progressive’s dilemma in Europe 118 Elie Murard 7 When does immigration shape support for a universal basic income? The role of education and employment status 137 Anthony Kevins 8 Welfare chauvinist or neoliberal opposition to immigrant welfare? The importance of measurement in the study of welfare chauvinism 156 Edward Anthony Koning 9 Personal and contextual foundations of welfare chauvinism in Western Europe 175 Conrad Ziller and Romana Careja PART III POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS AND POLICIES AS SHAPERS OF THE WELFARE-MIGRATION CONTEXT 10 Framing matters: Pathways between policies, immigrant integration, and native attitudes 195 Anita Manatschal 11 The politics of multiculturalism and redistribution: Immigration, accommodation, and solidarity in diverse democracies 210 Keith Banting, Daniel Westlake, and Will Kymlicka 12 The politicization of immigration and welfare: The progressive’s dilemma, the rise of far-right parties, and challenges for the left 230 Maureen A. Eger and Joakim Kulin 13 Inclusive solidarity? The social democratic dilemma: Between EU rules and supporters’ preferences 255 Zoe Lefkofridi and Susanne Rhein 14 Institutional sources of trust resilience in diverse societies: The mitigating role of inclusive and egalitarian welfare state institutions 276 Elif Naz Kayran and Melanie Kolbe 15 Inequality, immigration, and welfare regimes: Untangling the connections 297 Christel Kesler 16 Welfare states and migration policy: The main challenges for scholarship 321 Frida Bor.ng, Sara Kalm, and Johannes Lindvall PART IV POLITICAL CULTURE, MIGRATION, AND REDISTRIBUTION 17 What explains opposition to immigration: Economic anxiety, cultural threat, or both? 338 Hanna Kleider 18 Economic resentment or cultural malaise: What accounts for nativist sentiments in contemporary liberal democracies? 351 Hans-Georg Betz 19 Does contact with strangers matter? 367 Eric M. Uslaner 20 A world to win at work? An integrated approach to meaningful interethnic contact 382 Katerina Manevska, Roderick Sluiter, and Agnes Akkerman 21 Constructing national identity and generalized trust in diverse democracies 405 Patti Tamara Lenard 22 Critically different or similarly critical? The roots of welfare state criticism among ethnic minority and majority citizens in Belgium 420 Arno Van Hootegem, Koen Abts, and Bart Meuleman PART V THE VIEW FROM THE GLOBAL SOUTH: THE EFFECTS OF MIGRATION ON ORIGIN COUNTRIES 23 The Janus face of remittances: Do remittances support or undermine development in the Global South? 442 Farid Makhlouf and Oussama Ben Atta 24 Tracing the links between migration and food security in Bangladesh 470 Mohammad Moniruzzaman and Margaret Walton-Roberts 25 Migration as a development strategy: Debating the role that migrants and those in diaspora can play 488 Elizabeth Mavroudi 26 The migration–development nexus under scrutiny 504 Ra.l Delgado Wise Index 517
£218.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Handbook on Forced Migration
Book SynopsisForced migration in the 21st century is closely linked to three global developments: climate change, rapid urbanization and the lack of solutions faced by millions of displaced people. The Handbook on Forced Migration brings a critical lens to the study of these issues. By adding the often overlooked disciplines of history and philosophy, this Handbook challenges narratives on forced migration, explains contemporary challenges, and provides a call for action.Each section of the Handbook presents diverse perspectives and a range of case studies on the interaction between forced migration and climate change, urbanization and solutions. The Introduction challenges different forced migration narratives, and the Conclusion makes new arguments for standards in forced migration research. A final chapter explores potential problems for forced migrants around digital technology,This fascinating Handbook will be an important read for human rights, humanitarian and development practitioners, and for urban studies and migration scholars and students. The research-centred approach will benefit academics and policymakers undertaking new investigations.Trade Review‘As global displacement is seen to be ever increasing in scale and complexity, this collection of perspectives – from a truly remarkable group of contributors – is essential reading for anyone that seeks to more fully understand this enduring phenomenon.’ -- James Milner, Carleton University, Canada‘The Handbook on Forced Migration provides a wide-ranging and iconoclastic set of reflections on forced migration across disciplinary perspectives. The first-rate and diverse set of contributors prove excellent guides through the thicket of this fundamental issue of our time.’ -- Matthew J. Gibney, University of Oxford, UK‘The Handbook on Forced Migration is a unique resource blending the perspectives of migrants, practitioners, and many of the leading lights and rising stars of academic research. Jacobsen and Majidi have curated an excellent introduction to many of the most vexing issues in the field.’ -- David Scott FitzGerald, University of California San Diego, US‘With a focus on climate change displacement, urban areas, and solutions to displacement and through a lens that braids history and philosophy, this insightful examination of forced migration is novel, timely, and needed—highly recommended for anyone concerned with knowledge production in migration research and with today’s policy approaches.’ -- Cecilia Menjívar, University of California, Los Angeles, USTable of ContentsContents: Preface xviii Nassim Majidi POEM: MAZEN SLEEPS WITH HIS FOOT ON THE FLOOR BY MARTÍN ESPADA PART I INTRODUCTION 1 Introduction to the Handbook on Forced Migration: a critical take on forced migration today 3 Karen Jacobsen and Nassim Majidi 2 Negotiating ambiguous status: mixed migration in theory and practice 20 Katrina Burgess 3 Migrant categorization under the patchwork of international, regional, and national law 33 John Cerone PART II PHILOSOPHY 4 Philosophy of forced migration: sit at the table or knock it over 45 Hervé Nicolle 5 Labels, norms: the illusion of control 58 Interview with Oliver Bakewell 6 Thinking without ‘fixing’: towards a feminist political geography 66 Interview with Jennifer Hyndman 7 Ethics, globalization, counter-narratives: confronting structural injustice 76 Interview with Serena Parekh 8 Dissensus, fictions, emancipation: the struggle for a world to come 85 Interview with Jacques Rancière 9 Securitization, decriminalization, resistance: from old fears to new values 92 Interview with Seyla Benhabib 10 Otherness, language, exile: expressing the poem of the Relation 100 Interview with Tanella Boni POEM: FLOATERS BY MARTÍN ESPADA NARRATIVE: CROSSING BORDERS BY FIRAT BOZÇALI AND REBECCA GALEMBA PART III HISTORY 11 Historical perspectives on forced migration 117 Susan Martin 12 Historians and forced migration: a persistent feeling of disconnect? 134 Jerome Elie 13 Reckoning with refugeedom: historical perspectives 142 Peter Gatrell 14 History, memory and the ethics of asylum 149 Tony Kushner 15 The roots of asylum 155 Ninette Kelley 16 Historical process tracing and forced migration: re-examining the creation of the refugee definition 162 Phil Orchard 17 Historiographies of early modern forced migrations in Europe and the Atlantic world 168 Susanne Lachenicht 18 The antecedents of forced migration in the Middle East 176 Dawn Chatty 19 The ‘home-coming’ of the refugees: narratives of partition-induced forced migration in South Asia (1947–1971) 182 Anindita Ghoshal POEM: ASKING QUESTIONS OF THE MOON BY MARTÍN ESPADA NARRATIVE: ENCLAVE DWELLERS AND PROXY CITIZENS IN BANGLADESH AND INDIA BY MD AZMEARY FERDOUSH PART IV CLIMATE CHANGE AND ENVIRONMENTAL MOBILITY 20 Climate change, population, environment and forced migration 193 Jennifer Ventrella and Michael Cohen 21 Climate change, migration and inequality in contemporary India 207 Kavya Michael and Juhi Bansal 22 Climate and migration in Latin America and the Caribbean 215 Maiara Folly and Adriana Erthal Abdenur 23 Theorizing mobility justice in contexts of climate mobilities 225 Mimi Sheller 24 Challenging the “lifeboat discourse” on population and migration 232 Anne Hendrixson 25 Climate mobility and COP accountability 243 Karen Jacobsen and Susan Martin POEM: I WOULD STEAL A CAR FOR YOU BY MARTÍN ESPADA NARRATIVE: WAITING IN TRANSIT BY ANTJE MISSBACH PART V URBAN SETTINGS 26 The urbanisation of displacement 256 Lucy Earle 27 If not camps, then… cities? 270 Dyfed Aubry 28 Aid-induced informal settlement creation following disaster: the cautionary tale of Port-au-Prince’s Canaan slum 277 Christopher Ward and Louis Jadotte 29 Reconstruction as violence and forced displacement in Syria 283 Deen Sharp 30 Self-reliance in urban contexts for displaced people 291 Kellie C. Leeson, Paul Karanja, Galo Quizanga Zambrano and Dale Buscher 31 Framing urban displacement economies 298 Alison Brown, Patricia Garcia Amado, Engida Esayas Dube, Tegegne Gebre-Egziabher and Peter Mackie 32 From integration to conviviality: Syrian refugees in London and Berlin 307 Deena Dajani 33 National and local orders in the response to Venezuelan forced migration in Colombia: perspective from urban settings 314 Carolina Moreno, Gracy Pelacani and Laura Dib-Ayesta 34 The value of mayors in urban displacement settings: the case of Amman, Jordan 319 Yousef Al Shawarbeh (Mayor of Amman) and Samer Saliba POEM: NOT FOR HIM THE FIERY LAKE OF THE FALSE PROPHET BY MARTÍN ESPADA NARRATIVE: MARKETS OF DISPLACEMENT BY LUIGI ACHILLI AND KIM WILSON PART VI SOLUTIONS 35 Putting people back into place 331 Cathrine Brun 36 Rethinking solutions in never-ending displacement: what are the alternatives? 349 Cathrine Brun, Anita H. Fábos, Maha Shuayb and Nicholas Van Hear in conversation 37 Self-reliance and refugee economics in Uganda 362 Eria Serwajja and Hilde Refstie 38 Displacement limbo: durable solutions for IDPs in Georgia and Ukraine 376 Sean Loughna with Olga Ivanova and Julia Kharasvili 39 The shifting grammar of durable solutions in Latin America 388 Marcia Vera Espinoza POEM: I NOW PRONOUNCE YOU DEAD BY MARTÍN ESPADA NARRATIVE: RETURN AFTER INTERRUPTED MIGRATION CYCLES BY MAYBRITT JILL ALPES PART VII LIVED EXPERIENCES: THE VIEWS OF REFUGEES AND PRACTITIONERS REFUGEES 40 Narrative: life in South Africa: irresistible soft power meets the hard reality 412 Barnabas Ticha Muvhuti 41 Narrative: we escaped in seconds … it then takes four years to become a refugee 414 Hassan Hersi 42 Narrative: a Malawian in South Africa – the good and the bad 416 Mwaona Nyirongo 43 Narrative: I have always felt like I am not a forced migrant … enough 418 Yuliia Kabanets 44 Narrative: when a new chapter in my life began as a ‘forced migrant’ 420 Saida Azimi 45 Narrative: the second time I became a refugee 423 Zabihullah Barakzai PRACTITIONERS 46 Narrative: a few thoughts about UNHCR and the UN 426 Joel Boutroue 47 Narrative: a discredited model of refugee response 431 Jeff Crisp 48 Narrative: a more realistic conversation on solutions 434 Ninette Kelley 49 Narrative: moving beyond emergency assistance 438 Renata Dubini 50 Narrative: forced migration – a personal view 439 Richard Danziger PART VIII THE FUTURE 51 Responsibility and trust: using digital technologies in forced migration 443 Evan Easton-Calabria 52 Conclusion: a call for ethical standards in forced migration research 461 Nassim Majidi and Karen Jacobsen Index
£215.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd The Interplay between the EU's Return Acquis and
Book SynopsisThis insightful book thoroughly examines how the EU's return acquis is inspired by, and integrates, international migration and human rights law. It also explores how this body of EU law has shaped international law-making relating to the removal of non-nationals.Set against the background of the classic doctrine on the 'autonomy of EU law' and the EU's objective to 'develop international law', Tamás Molnár depicts a legally sound and elaborate picture of the EU’s return acquis vis-à-vis international law, both internally and externally. From the perspective of the EU legal order, it offers important insights into this field from both a constitutional perspective and from the point of view of the substantive area of migration law. Chapters provide in-depth analysis of the EU's return-related legislative developments reflecting international law and the expanding return-related jurisprudence of the EU Court of Justice.Bridging the gap between EU and international law, which both have unique characteristics and are often studied in different spheres, this book will appeal to academics and practising lawyers dealing with the expulsion of migrants in irregular situations. It will also be a useful read for law scholars, practitioners and postgraduate students who wish to further their understanding of the interactions between these two legal orders.Trade Review‘Overall, the volume’s most remarkable contribution is the examination of the theoretical foundations of EU legal order vis-à-vis international law from a migration law perspective, one that has been so far largely disregarded. Molnár provides a very comprehensive and detailed overview of the interactions between EU and international law in this field; in doing so he has also illuminated the topic of migration and expulsion of irregular migrants, drawing attention to the field beyond its immediate sector and attempting to draw conclusions that contribute to a more comprehensive debate on general principles of EU law.’ -- Eleonora Celoria, Common Market Law Review‘By exploring the question of return from the perspective of a multifaceted relationship between EU and international law, the book proves to be a unique contribution to the existing literature in the field. It enriches the literature devoted to both the EU and international legal orders. This book is timely and relevant as the negotiations on the recast Return Directive are ongoing and an overriding objective of the EU’s new Pact on Migration and Asylum19 is to increase the number of returns.’ -- Izabella Majcher, Hungarian Yearbook of International Law and European Law‘Molnár’s book brilliantly helps us understand how the EU has been and will be able to influence the international law making in the field of migration and human rights.’ -- Andrea Maria Pelliconi, City Law Forum'This book is not only an extremely interesting one on the return of irregular migrants that is a must read for migration specialists, but it is also an excellent essay about the complex subject of the autonomy of EU law and its relations with international law to recommend to all EU lawyers.' -- Philippe de Bruycker, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium'This book is a must read for anyone interested in the intersection of EU and international law in the area of migration and specifically expulsion (known as ''return'' in EU parlance). The book is both authoritative and profound in its examination of the relative weakness of the EU's incorporation of international standards in this area as opposed to more generally. The arguments are exceptionally well developed and supported.' -- Elspeth Guild, Queen Mary University of London, UK'In times when return and readmission policies shape public and policy discourse in the area of migration management both within the EU but also internationally, this book could not be more timely. It is an important milestone in the study of the EU and international law relating to return of irregular migrants, masterfully elucidating not only the interaction between the two legal regimes but also the way the EU can exercise its normative power in this important domain.' -- Sergo Mananashvili, Senior Advisor, Migration Dialogues and Cooperation, ICMPD‘Analysing interactions between EU and international law in the specific field related to return of migrants, this book reveals intriguing dynamics. As a unique contribution to legal scholarship, it explores how the EU Return Directive has been inspired by international law, whereas CJEU case law has prioritized autonomy of EU law. Yet, attempting to shape international law, the EU engaged with UN and regional standard-setting processes on returns. Dr Molnár convincingly demonstrates that the EU seeks to influence international law from which it claims autonomy and which the Union is constitutionally committed to respect.’ -- Izabella Majcher, European Council on Refugees and ExilesTable of ContentsContents: Preface 1. Introduction to The Interplay between the EU’s Return Acquis and International Law 2. ‘Fifty shades’ of separateness of EU law from international law: the autonomy and openness of the EU legal order 3. The influence of international migration law and human rights law on the EU return acquis 4. From EU law towards international law: the EU’s role in shaping the international legal order 5. The impact of the EU return acquis on the international law regimes governing the ‘expulsion of aliens’ 6. General conclusions: assessing the landscape Bibliography Index
£95.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Research Handbook on the Sociology of Migration
Book SynopsisAdeptly navigating one of the most pressing issues on the current global agenda, this topical Research Handbook provides a comprehensive and research-based exploration of the sociology of migration. As well as highlighting the field’s achievements and current challenges, it explores key concepts used in current research, methods employed, and the spheres and contexts in which migrants participate. Presenting an open and pluralistic approach to international migration, this Research Handbook offers a wealth of conceptual analysis, featuring insightful contributions from over 40 leading scholars. Split into three thematic sections, it expertly examines a wide range of theoretical terms, research methods and techniques, and provides an in-depth analysis of the significant work that has been carried out to date in relation to migration. It ultimately sheds light on important discussions surrounding the origins of the sociology of migration, considering not only past events, but also future directions of research for this ever-evolving field of study.Offering a unique and forward-thinking perspective, this authoritative Handbook will serve as a fundamental reference for students, scholars, and practitioners in the fields of sociology and social policy, development studies, and political science, as well as in the wider social sciences.Trade Review‘This Research Handbook is an essential companion for advanced researchers and a compass for aspiring scholars. It embeds the most common concepts in the history of migration studies, informs about the use of different methods in migration research and connects to the empirical realities of migration societies. The book is an important, globally focused contribution to understanding contemporary debates about migration, a principal driver and consequence of transformation in modern societies.’ -- Gianni D'Amato, University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland‘Anyone wishing to understand the movement of populations in the modern world and the challenges of integration must start with a basic knowledge of the sociology of migration. The editors of this volume have brought together in a single work many of the leading scholars in the field to offer a comprehensive guide to key concepts, methods, space, and place—an invaluable resource for students and scholars alike.’ -- James F. Hollifield, Southern Methodist University, US‘Sciortino, Cvajner, Kivisto and their chapter authors make valuable contributions to the scholarship on migration. They offer succinct histories of the field and its different thematic, epistemic, and methodological currents, and insightfully parse differences. The chapters also offer concise reviews, engagements, and extensions of a wide range of both well-trodden and emerging areas of work. Despite three decades in the field, I learned a lot from reading this Research Handbook, and strongly recommend it. It will be useful both to long-time scholars and for undergraduate classes.’ -- Robert Courtney Smith, City University of New York, US‘Presenting 34 chapters written by leading international scholars in the field, the Research Handbook on the Sociology of Migration comprises a contemporary, integrated and comprehensive resource for scholars and students of sociology and other disciplines interested in migration issues. A highly accessible Research Handbook with an impressive diversity of themes all contributing to the constantly growing dynamic of this sociological subfield.’ -- Pieter Bevelander, Malmö University, Sweden‘The Research Handbook on the Sociology of Migration is a tour de force in international migration studies, moving away from a myopic view of migration by incorporating a plurality of theoretical, methodological and contextual perspectives. By developing a relational approach in which individuals, communities and societies interact with the boundary-crossing realities of our migratory world, editors Sciortino, Cvajner and Kivisto conceptualise migration in a truly global way. This is a book from which even seasoned scholars of migration will learn.’ -- Elisabeth Jane Becker-Topkara, Heidelberg University, GermanyTable of ContentsContents: Introduction. The sociology of migration: where has it been and where is it going? 1 Martina Cvajner, Peter J. Kivisto, and Giuseppe Sciortino PART I KEY CONCEPTS 1 Mobility, immobility, and migration 12 Nicholas DeMaria Harney 2 Borders and boundaries 23 Giuseppe Sciortino 3 Migration categories and the politics of labeling 34 Leila Hadj Abdou and Federica Zardo 4 Gender 46 Johanna Leinonen 5 Migration chains and migration networks: researching migration as a social process 60 Remus Gabriel Anghel 6 Sequences and transitions in migration 74 Russell King and Ronald Skeldon 7 Migration systems 86 Oliver Bakewell 8 Migration policies and politics 96 Joaquín Arango 9 Migration and border regimes 109 Bernd Kasparek 10 Contexts of reception 122 Ayumi Takenaka 11 Theorizing modes of incorporation 133 Peter J. Kivisto 12 Diversity and super-diversity 143 Ivano Bison and Daniel Joseph Belback 13 Inclusion and exclusion 156 Gabriel Echeverría and Claudia Finotelli 14 Remittances in a world of uncertainty and insecurity 167 Ibrahim Sirkeci 15 Transnationalism and the making of diasporas 181 Thomas Lacroix 16 Children of immigrants and the second generation 192 Davide Azzolini and Philipp Schnell PART II METHODS AND TECHNIQUES 17 Secondary analysis of government and official data on international migration 206 Corrado Bonifazi 18 Ethnography in migration studies: an everlasting love? 215 Martina Cvajner 19 Quantitative surveys on migration 227 Erik Vickstrom and Cris Beauchemin 20 Connecting with connected migrants: exploring the field of digital migration studies 243 Bernadette Nadya Jaworsky 21 Toward the use of emotions as a methodological technique for the empirical analysis of migration 258 Elizabeth Aranda, Girsea Martinez Rosas, and Rebecca Blackwell 22 Network analysis 272 Başak Bilecen 23 Visual methods in migration research 285 Susan Ball PART III SITES, PLACES, AND SPHERES 24 Sending communities, social spheres, and households: what can be learned about migration 300 Jeffrey H. Cohen 25 Borders, embassies, and visas: the lessons of sociological lenses 307 Federica Infantino 26 Workplaces and labor markets 319 Mattia Vitiello 27 Migration in families and households 328 Heather M. Wurtz and Heide Castañeda 28 Housing and home 340 Enrico Fravega and Paolo Boccagni 29 Sociabilities: kin, friends, and acquaintances in international migration 351 Rocco Molinari 30 Migrant associations and communities 363 Margit Fauser 31 Migration and the welfare state 375 Grete Brochmann 32 The religious migrant 387 Tuomas Martikainen 33 Sport and migration 400 Max Mauro 34 Migration, museums, (and archives) 411 Aleksandra Kubica Index 423
£210.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Handbook of Human Mobility and Migration
Book SynopsisWhile mobility trajectories and experiences are key in migrants’ lives, they are relatively neglected in the field of migration studies. Using mobility as a unique angle of approach, the Handbook of Human Mobility and Migration is a pioneering assessment of the theoretical concerns, empirical questions and issues of governance surrounding international mobility and migration today.Adopting an empirical interdisciplinary approach, Ettore Recchi and Mirna Safi draw together incisive contributions from a wide range of experts in the fields of sociology, geography, political science and demography. Chapters explore circular migration, public opinion on immigration, visa and border infrastructure and debates on whether international migration is truly global. They examine the critical research gap between mobility and migration, and address paramount questions using state-of-the-art theories and evidence.Providing concise overviews of issues at the top of the current research agenda in the field, this timely Handbook will be an essential reference for students and academics of migration studies, sociology, social policy, political science, human geography, demography, and international relations. It will also be of significant interest to researchers and policy professionals operating in these fields.Trade Review‘What truly sets this Handbook apart is its robust empirical foundation, drawing from both established and innovative data sources. It is, without a doubt, a truly “handy” Handbook, an indispensable resource for aspiring scholars entering the field and a must-have for anyone seeking to remain at the forefront of recent advancements and research trends.’ -- Stefano M. Iacus, Harvard University, US‘If to be human is to be mobile, then what is special about migration? The answer is to be found in the elegantly written, deeply informative chapters that comprise this Handbook, an essential guide to a core phenomenon that is shaping our world. Highly recommended to scholars and students alike.’ -- Roger Waldinger, University of California, Los Angeles, US‘The Handbook of Human Mobility and Migration is a powerful volume that brings a new framework to a crowded field of studies on mobility and migration. In fact, it is precisely the crowded nature of these fields that creates a need for a synthetic and reflective volume such as this one. Anchored in their careful consideration of mobility and migration, the authors encourage us to move forward and understand the broader trends of human movement. We have all spent too many years publishing in narrow and outdated perspectives. Therefore, the Handbook will be valuable for a wide range of scholars looking to understand the next generation of research on these topics.’ -- Rahsaan Maxwell, New York University, US‘This is an innovative Handbook bringing together different types of mobility and migration and asking how they are connected from analytical and policy perspectives. Ettore Recchi and Mirna Safi have brought together a distinguished group of scholars to review critically different types of migration and related policies and practices. The result is a selective but highly innovative book that will be an important read for both students and researchers in the field.’ -- Anna Triandafyllidou, Toronto Metropolitan University, CanadaTable of ContentsContents: Introduction to the Handbook of Human Mobility and Migration: Human mobility as hallmark of our age xii Ettore Recchi and Mirna Safi PART I RETHINKING 1 Is Homo sapiens a growingly mobile species (in the very long run)? 2 Massimo Livi Bacci 2 Have migrants become a distinct category in social stratification research? 12 Mirna Safi 3 Are migrants a select population? 34 Mathieu Ichou 4 Is there an end to mobility? Circular and onward migrants 53 Louise Caron 5 Are international and internal migration distinct phenomena? 70 Marine Haddad and Haley McAvay PART II MAPPING 6 How global is international mobility? 94 Emanuel Deutschmann and Ettore Recchi 7 Are high-speed rail and airplane mobilities socially stratified? 113 Yoann Demoli and Frédéric Dobruszkes 8 Where, when and why are students internationally mobile? 128 Christof Van Mol, Joep Cleven and Benjamin Mulvey 9 Child migration: who, where, when, why? 148 Chiara Galli 10 International retirement migration: who, why, where and when? 163 Russell King 11 Public opinion on immigration: is it converging globally or regionally? 182 James Dennison and Alina Vrânceanu PART III GOVERNING 12 Visas and border infrastructures: what makes them tighter or looser? 203 Fabian Gülzau and Steffen Mau 13 Does the forced/voluntary dichotomy really influence migration governance? 221 Hélène Thiollet, Ferruccio Pastore and Camille Schmoll 14 Free movement regimes: is the EU experience exportable? 241 Rainer Bauböck 15 Transnationality mobility and welfare rights: are they compatible? 256 Maurizio Ferrera and Anna Kyriazi Index
£175.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Research Handbook on Migration and Education
Book SynopsisContributing to the shaping of education and migration as a distinct field of research, this forward-looking Research Handbook explores cross-cutting questions on the range of challenges facing education systems, migrant children and students today. Covering an impressive range of local, national and educational contexts, this Research Handbook explores diverse case studies, educational initiatives, approaches and policies that have been developed to support migrant and mobile students, educational professionals and schools. Chapters offer a broad understanding of the multifaceted nature of global migration today, exploring varied theoretical and methodological perspectives, and examining the educational challenges and opportunities presented by migration. The Research Handbook ultimately stresses the importance of interdisciplinary research into the complex phenomenon of global migration and its impact on education systems and the educational trajectories of migrant children. Students and scholars in the fields of education, migration, childhood studies and globalization studies will find this Research Handbook an invaluable reference. Its wide range of case studies on different educational provisions designed to support migrant children in schools will further benefit educational practitioners and policymakers.Trade Review‘This superb Research Handbook could not be more welcome. The emergent field of migration and education is handsomely illustrated in the exemplary, original research represented here. Despite investigating so many diverse national contexts, the chapter authors concur that migration of children and youth is today enriching, disrupting and reshaping educational systems globally in ways that demand our attention. By addressing the challenge of inclusivity from various angles, they engage critically with policy discourses around the right to education, identifying implementation problems especially where national/local hostility occurs, whilst highlighting transformative agendas associated with the presence and voices of migrant youth, whether in schools or higher education. All education practitioners and researchers need to ingest the messages contained in this Handbook, to look at their own assumptions about migration and to address, politically and pedagogically, the exclusionary Othering and potential alienation of the millions of displaced or migrant young people in the world today.’ -- Emerita Professor Madeleine Arnot, Co-founder of the Centre for the Study of Global Human Movement, University of Cambridge, UKTable of ContentsContents: 1 Introduction: education and migration as a field of research 1 Halleli Pinson, Dympna Devine and Nihad Bunar PART I APPROACHES TO THE EDUCATIONAL INCLUSION OF REFUGEE AND MIGRANT CHILDREN 2 The border within: decolonizing refugee students’ education 22 Fabio Dovigo 3 Inclusive systems as relational space in and around schools for supporting migrants in education: transitions from diametric to concentric spatial systems 37 Paul Downes 4 Migration and acculturation: supporting migrant students’ school adjustment in multicultural schools 54 Elena Makarova and Petra Sidler 5 The organization of school integration for refugee children and youth in Germany: identifying gaps in the current state of knowledge 68 Mona Massumi, Christina Brandl and Annette Korntheuer 6 Inclusion of newly arrived migrant students in Swedish schools: organizational models and support measures 83 Nihad Bunar 7 Young refugees’ inclusion and belonging upon entering upper secondary education in Norway 98 Lutine de Wal Pastoor 8 Perceptions of immigrant parental engagement in primary schools in Ireland 114 Dympna Devine, Merike Darmody and Emer Smyth 9 School choice of West African migrants in Ghana 130 Daniel Owusu Kyereko and Daniel Faas PART II SUPPORTING PRACTICES IN SCHOOLS AND THE COMMUNITY: LANGUAGE(S) AND LEARNING SUPPORT 10 Evidence-based instructional responses to opportunity gaps experienced by immigrant-background students 142 Jim Cummins 11 Measuring the academic progress of newly arrived migrant and refugee youth: an Australian school-based longitudinal study 157 Sue Creagh 12 Language brokering and immigrant children’s everyday learning in home and community contexts 173 Marjorie Faulstich Orellana and Inmaculada García-Sánchez 13 Migration, special educational needs and inclusive education 189 William Kinsella, Amalia Fenwick, Paula Prendeville and Michelle Kelly 14 Complementary schools as heritage language communities of practice: reaching beyond language maintenance 203 Yongcan Liu and Lottie Hoare 15 Educational services of informal local refugee support organizations in Türkiye: their role and practices 221 Ozlem Erden-Basaran 16 Mentoring and other educational support for children of immigrants: research, policy relevance, and good practice 236 Jens Schneider PART III VULNERABILITY, VOICE AND AGENCY 17 Representing vulnerable, Syrian migrant children’s insights: testimonies of inclusion and exclusion in schooling 249 Eleanore Hargreaves and Jumana Al-Waeli 18 Rethinking inclusion: empowering the children of sex workers in Kalighat, Kolkata, India 262 Khaleda Gani Dutt 19 The education of left-behind children in rural China 272 Rachel Murphy and Yan Zhang 20 Push up, be grateful, and tell us your challenges: youth caught between dependency and self-reliance in Kakuma Refugee Camp 285 Michelle J. Bellino and Rahul Oka 21 Convivial education: unaccompanied youth challenge power structures in South African schools 299 Noa Levy 22 Refugee-background students in southern New Zealand: educational navigation and necessary self-sufficiency 310 Vivienne Anderson, Alejandra Ortiz Ayala and Sayedali Mostolizadeh PART IV MIGRATION, INTERNATIONAL MOBILITY AND EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITY 23 International student mobility: themes and issues 324 Rachel Brooks and Johanna Waters 24 Student mobility in Korean higher education 338 Rennie Moon 25 Student migration between Mexico and the United States: possibilities and disputes associated with becoming mobile 353 Alma Maldonado-Maldonado, Juan Carlos Aguilar Castillo and Christian Cortes-Velasco 26 Access and integration of refugees into higher education: a Turkish inclusive approach 370 Ayselin Yildiz 27 Mind the gap: asylum seeker and refugee access to post-compulsory education 384 Caroline Oliver 28 What makes a higher education learning environment inclusive? An example from the Netherlands 397 Nasser Mohamedhoesein, Maurice Crul and Marieke Slootman 29 Globally mobile professionals and school choice 421 Khen Tucker, Miri Yemini and Claire Maxwell PART V BETWEEN THE STATE AND THE SCHOOL: THE TENSION BETWEEN IMMIGRATION AND EDUCATION POLICIES 30 Migration and education in the media: a discourse analysis of the press in France and England 434 Oakleigh Welply 31 A rights-based policy approach to realising education rights in the context of international migration 449 Ruth Brittle 32 The promises of Ethiopia’s new policy for inclusion of refugees into the national education system and challenges for local implementation 465 Alebachew Kemisso Haybano 33 Educational policies and schooling for migrant children in China 480 Min Yu and Christopher B. Crowley 34 Migration and education in Spain since the 1990s and the turn of the century: policy and practice trapped in time 496 Silvia Carrasco 35 Education in Australia for forced migrants: examining the differences in entitlements between permanent and temporary protection 509 Sally Baker, Loshini Naidoo and Jennifer M. Azordegan 36 Best practices for integration: analyzing the migration and education policies in Latin American host countries 525 Jessica Crist and Katharine Summers Index 543
£245.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Handbook on Migration and Ageing
Book SynopsisThis comprehensive Handbook explores the fundamental concepts surrounding the ageing-migration nexus. It is indispensable reading, presenting interdisciplinary research to investigate the unique experiences of older migrants, migrant eldercare workers and older people left behind.Illustrating the various contemporary topics of study used to explore the connections between migration and ageing, the Handbook discusses how the research interest surrounding this interrelation has developed. Chapters explore two central factors that have influenced the ageing-migration nexus, namely population ageing and the globalization of international migration. It aptly draws attention to conclusions drawn from already completed research ventures, before considering what research still needs to be conducted.This innovative Handbook will be an ideal resource for researchers and practitioners aiming to familiarize themselves with the field. It will also be beneficial for more experienced researchers studying topics such as migration, welfare states and social gerontology, as well as academics looking to become more informed on the connections between migration and ageing.Trade Review‘The Handbook on Migration and Ageing represents a comprehensive overview of one of the major social and public policy issues of our time. It offers both a detailed conceptual framework for understanding the relationship between migration and ageing, as well as a state-of-the-art survey of empirical research. A major virtue of the Handbook is demonstrating the diversity of migrants and the migration experience, ranging over a wide variety of subjects and themes. It represents a major editorial achievement and will be a key reference work for academics, policymakers and practitioners alike.’ -- Chris Phillipson, University of Manchester, UK‘In this ambitious and wide-ranging collection, the authors advance understandings at the nexus of ageing and migration by bringing together cutting-edge conceptual and empirical work. This book will be an invaluable resource to researchers across many disciplines and geographical regions.’ -- Louise Ryan, London Metropolitan University, UKTable of ContentsContents: Preface xvii 1 Migration and ageing: the nexus and its backdrop 1 Sandra Torres and Alistair Hunter PART I CONCEPTUAL FOUNDATIONS 2 The life course and migration: the social position of ageing 14 Stephen Katz and Amanda Grenier 3 Intergenerational relations 25 Ken Chih-Yan Sun 4 Retirement 35 Marion Repetti 5 Ethnicity and race 45 Sandra Torres 6 Super-diversity and intersectionality 57 Ruxandra Oana Ciobanu 7 Welfare/migration regimes and care chains 67 Majella Kilkey 8 Integration and transnationalism 76 Claudio Bolzman 9 Social exclusion 87 Hanna MacInnes and Kieran Walsh 10 Ageing in place 98 Dora Sampaio and Katie Walsh 11 Racialization and racism 107 Sandra Torres 12 Dying and death 118 Eva Soom Ammann PART II CATEGORIES AT THE INTERSECTION OF MIGRATION AND AGEING 13 Internal migrants: movers and stayers 129 Herbert C. Northcott 14 The relationship between migration intensity and age 138 Philip Rees 15 Older refugees and internally displaced people 151 Alistair Hunter and Anita Böcker 16 Ageing international labour migrants 162 Anika Liversage 17 International retirement migrants 172 Russell King and Eralba Cela 18 Return and circular migration in later life 183 Alistair Hunter 19 Family reunification migrants and the Zero Generation 196 Mihaela Nedelcu 20 Left-behind older people 207 Audrey Lenoël 21 Migrant eldercare workers 217 Megha Amrith PART III SCHOLARSHIP FOCUSING ON AGENCY AND VULNERABILITIES 22 Older migrants and self-realization projects 229 Aija Lulle and Russell King 23 Older migrants and socio-economic inequalities 241 Zoya Gubernskaya and Tsveta Dobreva 24 Older migrants, health and well-being 251 Eralba Cela and Elisa Barbiano di Belgiojoso 25 Older migrants and mortality 260 Matthew Wallace 26 Social relations and older migrants 271 Kristine J. Ajrouch, Toni C. Antonucci and Rita Xiaochen Hu 27 Older migrants as transmitters of values and culture 280 Isabelle Albert 28 Loneliness among older migrants 290 Tineke Fokkema 29 Older migrants and dementia 301 Ingrid Hellström 30 Older migrants and access and usage of care 311 Karen M. Kobayashi and Mushira M. Khan 31 Older migrants and care recipiency 322 Vincent Horn 32 Older migrants’ use of information and communication technologies 333 Raelene Wilding Index
£185.00
Edward Elgar Research Handbook on Migration and Employment
Book SynopsisThis insightful Research Handbook presents a comprehensive overview of the core issues concerning the integration of migration and employment studies, highlighting the interdisciplinary and global perspectives required to understand the complexity of labour migration.
£195.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Handbook on Human Security, Borders and Migration
Book SynopsisDrawing on the concept of the 'politics of compassion', this Handbook interrogates the political, geopolitical, social and anthropological processes which produce and govern borders and give rise to contemporary border violence.Chapters map different aspects of structural violence and mobilities in some of the world's most contentious border zones, highlighting the forms and practices that connect with labour exploitation, legal exclusion and a severe absence of human rights. International interdisciplinary contributors, including renowned sociologist Saskia Sassen, draw attention to the forms and spaces of resistance available to migrants and activists, contemplating how advocates attempt to provide protection and human security to those subjected to border violence. Offering empirical analyses of critical border spaces, the book covers extensively the US-Mexico border region and border zones around the Mediterranean. Border issues in South, Central and North America, Eastern Europe, Northern Europe, the Middle East, Central Africa and East and Central Asia are also discussed. The Handbook thus provides a truly transnational approach to borders and migration, demonstrating the dynamic but asymmetric relationship between the social structure of border enforcement and the human agency of migrants and global activists.Combining theoretical insights into structural violence and human rights with key case studies of border zones, this comprehensive Handbook is crucial reading for scholars and researchers of social and political science investigating human migration, the humanitarian, border control and human rights. Its practical insights will also benefit policy-makers involved in borders and migration, as well as advocates and NGOs working with migrants and refugees to create secure environments.Trade Review’Human security is one of the most pressing issues of our time. As the world becomes more connected through globalization, barriers and borders simultaneously stifle and oppress world migrants. This Handbook should be required reading for understanding this problematic, in the U.S, Mexico, Europe and beyond, using a social science lens.’ -- - Howard Campbell, The University of Texas at El Paso, USTable of ContentsContents: Introduction to the Handbook on Human Security, Borders and Migration 1 Natalia Ribas-Mateos and Tim Dunn PART I THE ICONIC US–MEXICO BORDER REGION 1 The militarization of the US–Mexico border in the twenty-first century and implications for human rights 32 Timothy J. Dunn 2 The U.S.–Mexico border since 2014: overt migration contention and normalized violence 51 Josiah Heyman 3 The mantling and dismantling of a tent city at the U.S.–Mexico border 68 Cynthia L. Bejarano and Ma. Eugenia Hernández Sánchez 4 Undo/redo the violent wall: border-crossing practices and multi-territoriality 87 Marlene Solís PART II ON THE WAY TO THE US 5 The predatory character of today’s economies: a focus on borders and migrations 99 Saskia Sassen 6 New security: threat landscape and the emerging market for force 108 Blanca Camps-Febrer and John Andrew Carter, Jr. 7 An anti-Latin@ policing machine: enforcing the U.S./Mexico border along the Great Lakes and the 49th Parallel 122 Geoff Boyce and Todd Miller 8 The invisible dimension of institutional violence and the political construction of impunity: necropopulism and the averted medicolegal gaze 134 Bilgesu Sümer 9 ‘Migrant trash’ or humanitarian responsibility? Central American government state responses to deported nationals 145 Isabel Rosales Sandoval 10 Biopolitical governmentality at Chile’s northern border (Arica–Tacna) 162 Luis Iturra Valenzuela PART III CHALLENGING MEDITERRANEAN BORDERS 11 Major changes in “migrations and borders” after the “revolution” of globalized liberalism 174 Salvatore Palidda 12 Documenting and denouncing violence at eastern European borders: the socio-legal relevance of refugee voices through the production of audio-visual material 186 Chiara Denaro 13 Transnational humanitarianism: blurring the boundaries of the Mediterranean in Libya 207 Natalia Ribas-Mateos 14 Migration policies at the Spanish border in Southern Europe: between ‘welfare chauvinism’, hate discourse and policies of compassion 222 Belén Fernández-Suárez 15 The wall and the tunnels: crossings and separation at the border between Egypt, Israel and the Gaza Strip 236 Lorenzo Navone 16 Spanish–Algerian border relations: tensions between bilateral policies and population mobilities 250 María-Jesús Cabezón-Fernández, Juan-David Sempere-Souvannavong and Arslan Mazouni 17 Neighbour or stranger? Bordering practices in a small Catalan town 266 Martin Lundsteen PART IV REGIONS, PARTITIONS, AND EDGES 18 Border regions, migrations and the proliferation of violent expulsions 282 Saskia Sassen 19 Borders and violence in Burundi: regional responses, global responsibilities 298 Niamh Gaynor 20 Blood, smoke and cocaine? Reflections on the governance of the Amazonian border in contemporary Brazil 310 José Miguel Nieto Olivar, Flávia Melo and Marco Tobón 21 The borders of Macau in a geohistorical perspective: political dispute, (non)definition of limits and migratory phenomena in an original border-city 326 Alfredo Gomes Dias and Jorge Macaísta Malheiros 22 The Crimean borderscape: a changing landscape of political compassion and care 345 Greta Lynn Uehling 23 The Irish border as sign and source of British–Irish tensions 355 Katy Hayward, Peter Leary and Milena Komarova PART V VIOLENCE AND CONTAINMENT: APPROACHES TO YOUTH AND GENDER 24 African women on the road to Europe: violence and resilience in border zones 371 Kristin Kastner 25 Impact of the permanent crisis in the Central African Republic on Cameroonian return migrants 382 Henri Yambene Bomono 26 From Afghanistan border to Iranian cities: the case of migrant children in Tehran 397 Pooya Alaedini and Ameneh Mirzaei 27 Adolescent mobilities and border regimes in the western Mediterranean 410 Mercedes G. Jiménez Afterword: a brief mapping on borders 419 Marcos Correia Index
£208.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Handbook on Critical Geographies of Migration
Book SynopsisBorder walls, shipwrecks in the Mediterranean, separated families at the border, island detention camps: migration is at the centre of contemporary political and academic debates. This ground-breaking Handbook offers an exciting and original analysis of critical research on themes such as these, drawing on cutting-edge theories from an interdisciplinary and international group of leading scholars. With a focus on spatial analysis and geographical context, this volume highlights a range of theoretical, methodological and regional approaches to migration research, while remaining attuned to the underlying politics that bring critical scholars together. Divided into six thematic sections, including new areas in critical migration research, the book covers the key questions galvanizing migration scholars today, such as issues surrounding refugees and border militarization. Each chapter explores new themes, expanding on core theories to convey fresh insight to contemporary research. A key resource for migration, refugee and border studies this Handbook provides an in-depth analysis of the topic, covering a vast array of research ideas with a specific focus on the geographical aspects of migration. Scholars working on migration, refugees, asylum, transnationalism, humanitarianism and borders will find this an invaluable read. Contributors: J. Allsopp, I. Ataç, N. Bagheri, A. Blunt, J. Bonnerjee, A. Burridge, M. Casas-Cortes, A. Chikanda, S. Cobarrubias, K. Coddington, M. Collyer, D. Conlon, J. Crush, T. Davies, S. Dhesi, P. Ehrkamp, J.L. Fluri, G. Garelli, N. Gill, M. Gilmartin, C. Goh, M. Griffiths, E. Ho, J. Hyndman, A. Isakjee, R. Jones, B. Kasparek, P. Kelly, S. Kok, A.-K. Kuusisto-Arponen, R.B. Lacy, J. Loyd, K. MacFarlane, C. Maharaj, L. Martin, D.E. Martinez, E. Mavroudi, C. Menjívar, K. Mitchell, B. Muller, P. Pallister-Wilkins, N. Paszkiewicz, T. Raeymaekers, R. Rogers, R. Rotter, A. Sabhlok, R. Sampson, M. Schmidt-Sembdner, A. Secor, J. Slack, E. Steinhilper, S.D. Walsh, H. van Houtum, M. Walton-Roberts, K. Wee, Y. Weima, B. YeohTrade Review'This Handbook arrives at a significant time, when state and public responses to human mobility have taken a particularly hostile turn. A rich compendium, it examines numerous key spaces, scales, structures and dynamics of migration that characterize our turbulent era.' --Steven Vertovec, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Germany'By highlighting the intersection of two major themes - qualitative historical change within continuity and the significance of spatial analysis in the mapping of economic and political restructuring - this book advances migration studies and speaks to our precarious challenging times.' --Nina Glick Schiller, Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Germany'This comprehensively framed and engaging collection of essays by leading international geographers provides an innovative global perspective and critical analytic insights for both scholars and advocates into the multiple cultural, social, and political dimensions of international migration - a major contribution to contemporary theoretical and public policy debates.' --Josh DeWind, Social Science Research Council, USTable of ContentsContents: Introduction to Critical Geographies of Migration Katharyne Mitchell, Reece Jones, and Jennifer L. Fluri PART I New Issues in Critical Migration Research 1. Borders and bodies: Siting critical geographies of migration Mary Gilmartin and Anna-Kaisa Kuusisto-Arponen 2. Managing displacement: Negotiating transnationalism, encampment, and return Yolanda Weima and Jennifer Hyndman 3. Gender, Violence and Migration Cecilia Menjívar and Shannon Drysdale Walsh 4. The laws of impermanence: Displacement, sovereignty, subjectivity Timothy Raeymaekers 5. Biometric borders Benjamin J Müller PART II Corporeal and Gendered Geographies of Migration 6. Embodied migration and the geographies of care: The worlds of unaccompanied refugee minors Anna-Kaisa Kuusisto-Arponen and Mary Gilmartin 7. Corporeal geographies of labour migration in Asia Brenda S. A. Yeoh, Kellynn Wee, and Charmian Goh 8. Seasonal Migration and the working-class laboring body in India Anu Sabhlok 9. Embodiment and memory in the geopolitics of trauma Patrica Ehrkamp, Jenna M. Loyd, and Anna Secor 10. Gendered circular migrations of Afghans: Fleeing conflict and seeking opportunity Nazgol Bagheri and Jennifer L. Fluri PART III Borders, Violence, and the Externalization of Control 11. The geography of migrant death: Violence on the U.S.-Mexico border Jeremy Slack and Daniel E. Martinez 12. 'Ceci n'est pas la migration: The surrealist migration map of Frontex Henk van Houtum and Rodrigo Bueno-Lacy 13. From preventative to repressive: The changing use of development and humanitarianism to control migration Michael Collyer 14. Military-humanitarianism Glenda Garelli and Martina Tazzioli 15. Genealogies of contention in concentric circles: Remote migration control and its Eurocentric geographical imaginaries Maribel Casas-Cortes and Sebastian Cobarrubias 16. Renationalization and spaces of migration: The European border regime after 2015 Bernd Kasparek and Matthais Schmidt-Sembdner PART IV Camps, Detention, and Prisons 17. Informal migrant camps Thom Davies, Arshad Isakjee, and Surindar Dhesi 18. Fractures in Australia’s Asia-Pacific border continuum: Deterrence, detention, and the production of illegality Kate Coddington 19. Carceral mobility and flexible territoriality in immigration enforcement Lauren Martin 20. The biopolitics of alternatives to immigration detention Robyn Sampson PART V Transnationalism and Diaspora 21. Home and diaspora Alison Blunt and Jayani Bonnerjee 22. Revisiting diaspora as process: timespace, performative diasporas? Elizabeth Mavroudi 23. Diasporas and development Margaret Walton-Roberts , Jonathan Crush and Abel Chikanda 24. Approximating citizenship: Affective practices of Chinese diasporic descendants in Myanmar Elaine Lynn-Ee Ho 25. Geographies of the next generation: Outcomes for the children of immigrants through a spatial lens Philip Kelly and Cindy Maharaj 26. Social media and migration: A moral epistemology of Rwandan return Saskia Kok and Richard Rogers Part VI Refugees, Asylum, Humanitarianism 27. Contentious subjects: Spatial and relational perspectives on refugee mobilizations in Europe Elias Steinhilper and Ilker Ataç 28. Law, presence and refugee claim determination Nick Gill, Jennifer Allsopp, Andrew Burridge, Melanie Griffiths, Natalia Paszkiewicz, and Rebecca Rotter 29. Im/mobility and humanitarian triage Polly Pallister-Wilkins 30. Contradictions and provocations of neoliberal governmentality in the U.S. asylum seeking system Deirdre Conlon 31. Counter-mapping, refugees and asylum borders Martina Tazzioli and Glenda Garelli 32. The sanctuary network: Transnational church activism and refugee protection in Europe Katharyne Mitchell and Key MacFarlane Index
£42.70
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Gender and Migration
Book SynopsisThis volume demonstrates the ways in which a gender perspective has been incorporated into existing themes and methods of migration research and has also led to the development of new areas of interest. It draws together the most important published articles on gender and migration in North America, Europe, Latin America, Africa and Asia in order to highlight major theoretical developments relating to employment, gender relations, household organisation, identity, citizenship, transnationalism and migration policy. In the introduction the editors provide an overview of these key developments in gender and migration research, as well as suggesting topics for future research.Gender and Migration will be a valuable resource for demographers, geographers and gender studies researchers.Trade Review'. . . introduces the reader to a range of informative, interesting, persuasive and well-argued papers on gender and migration. As such, it represents an important and overdue acknowledgement of the centrality of gender to explanations and accounts of international migration.' -- Allen White, Progress in Human Geography'This collection belongs on migration researchers' shelves, and should be adopted as the primary text in seminars on gender and migration. But it should also be read more widely than its title implies, because the work collected suggests future directions for a range of various subfields within the discipline. The editors have done the discipline a service by bringing together such a powerful collection of writings, and by organizing this research under the rubric of gender and migration studies.' -- Rachel Silvey, Annals of the Association of American GeographersTable of ContentsContents: Acknowledgements • Introduction Part I: Gender and Migration Theory 1. Caroline Wright (1995), ‘Gender Awareness in Migration Theory: Synthesizing Actor and Structure in Southern Africa’ Part II: Households and Reproduction 2. Hania Zlotnik (1995), ‘Migration and the Family: The Female Perspective’ 3. Sylvia Chant (1991), ‘Gender, Migration and Urban Development in Costa Rica: The Case of Guanacaste’ Part III: Gender and International Labour Migration 4. Thanh-Dam Truong (1996), ‘Gender, International Migration and Social Reproduction: Implications for Theory, Policy, Research and Networking’ 5. Mirjana Morokvasic (1993), ‘“In and Out” of the Labour Market: Immigrant Women in Europe’ Part IV: Circular Migration 6. Mark Ellis, Dennis Conway and Adrian J. Bailey (1996), ‘The Circular Migration of Puerto Rican Women: Towards a Gendered Explanation’ Part V: Migration as Gendered Work 7. Janet W. Salaff (1997), ‘The Gendered Social Organization of Migration as Work’ Part VI: Migration and Gender Relations 8. Nazli Kibria (1990), ‘Power, Patriarchy, and Gender Conflict in the Vietnamese Immigrant Community’ 9. Patricia R. Pessar (1994), ‘Sweatshop Workers and Domestic Ideologies: Dominican Women in New York’s Apparel Industry’ Part VII: Social Constructions of Female Migrants 10. Lesley Gill (1993), ‘“Proper Women” and City Pleasures: Gender, Class, and Contested Meanings in La Paz’ 11. Richa Nagar (1998), ‘Communal Discourses, Marriage, and the Politics of Gendered Social Boundaries among South Asian Immigrants in Tanzania’ 12. Brenda S.A. Yeoh and Shirlena Huang (1998), ‘Negotiating Public Space: Strategies and Styles of Migrant Female Domestic Workers in Singapore’ Part VIII: Gender, Migration and Constructions of National Identity 13. Julia Bush (1994), ‘“The Right Sort of Woman”: Female Emigrators and Emigration to the British Empire, 1890–1910’ Part IX: Gender and Transnationalism 14. Marixsa Alicea (1997), ‘“A Chambered Nautilus”: The Contradictory Nature of Puerto Rican Women’s Role in the Social Construction of a Transnational Community’ 15. Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo and Ernestine Avila (1997), ‘“I’m Here, But I’m There”: The Meanings of Latina Transnational Motherhood’ Part X: Gendered Participation in Immigrant Politics 16. Michael Jones-Correa (1998), ‘Different Paths: Gender, Immigration and Political Participation’ Part XI: Gender, Migration and Citizenship 17. Daiva Stasiulis and Abigail B. Bakan (1997), ‘Negotiating Citizenship: The Case of Foreign Domestic Workers in Canada’ Part XII: Accompanying Spouses 18. Brenda S.A. Yeoh and Louise-May Khoo (1998), ‘Home, Work and Community: Skilled International Migration and Expatriate Women in Singapore’ 19. Arpita Chattopadhyay (1997), ‘Family Migration and the Economic Status of Women in Malaysia’ Part XIII: Women ‘Left Behind’ 20. Bridget O'Laughlin (1998), ‘Missing Men? The Debate Over Rural Poverty and Women-headed Households in Southern Africa’ Part XIV: Gender and Refugees 21. Eve Hall (1990), ‘Vocational Training for Women Refugees in Africa’ Name Index
£240.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Growth, Employment and Migration in Southeast
Book SynopsisThis comparative analysis of growth, structural change and labour market dynamics in the Greater Mekong countries (Yunnan Province in China, Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Lao PDR and Myanmar) of Southeast Asia is the first of its kind. It explores economic integration and cooperation, the possibilities for improving the functioning of labour markets and facilitating mutually beneficial labour flows in the region.The book begins with a comparative overview of policy reforms, economic performance and structural changes, focusing on economic relations in the Greater Mekong countries. It then examines the salient features of labour market structures and policies, patterns of cross-border migration, and information systems, paying attention to the similarities and differences between countries. It is especially timely in the context of economic transition from socialist systems in the three Indochina countries, the ongoing policy reforms in Yunnan Province and Myanmar, and in light of the Asian financial crisis in shaping growth trends. The analysis yields policy recommendations for improvement in labour market performance.The book will be of great interest to development and labour economists and those working in the field of Asian studies, as well as to policymakers.Trade Review'This is a good short introduction to an important topic.' -- Adam Fforde, Asian Journal of Social Science'This book by Athukorala, Manning and Wickramasekara is a welcome addition to the literature. . . The book unquestionably provides a useful summary of recent macro-level change and trends in and among the countries considered.' -- Ronald Skeldon, Asia and Pacific Migration Journal'There is much to recommend this book. It is well written and free of economic jargon, and will therefore be easily accessible to scholars in many disciplines. It provides an excellent overview of economic and labor issues in a region that has been rather neglected by academics. . . . a well-written volume that represents an important addition to the literature on Southeast Asia and transitional economies. It should be an essential reference to students and scholars interested in Southeast Asian economic development.' -- Kavita Pandit, Papers in Regional Science'. . . being useful seems to be the main purpose of this fine book, as there are no new interpretative theories or counterintuitive propositions, but the authors assemble and organize their data in such a way as to lead to operational conclusions and policy recommendations. . . . This is a useful and informative book for anyone interested in the economies of the greater Mekong region.' -- Thomas R. DeGregori, The Journal of Asian StudiesTable of ContentsContents: Preface 1. Structural Change, Labour Markets and Migration: The Greater Mekong Context 2. Economic Policy Settings and Structural Change 3. Labour Market Adjustment 4. Greater Regional Integration through International Migration 5. Conclusions: Challenges and Policy Options
£94.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Contemporary Minority Migration, Education and
Book SynopsisRural-urban migration is an important aspect in the development of countries. Until the late 1980s China was one of the few countries that controlled population movement both directly and indirectly through policies of economic and social control. The gradual relaxation of these policies has resulted in greater freedom of movement for the population, the effects of which are discussed in this significant volume.The book concentrates on the migration of minorities from a social, economic and ethnic perspective and attempts to quantify the overall level of movement. In particular, the authors examine the relationships between education, ethnicity and migration and identify the policies and conditions conducive to achieving positive outcomes for minority migrant households. The book aims to increase our understanding of the effects of movement, on the social, economic and ethnic status of migrant families. Taking existing census data as a starting point, the book makes a new contribution by drawing on a unique survey in four different regions, the data from which is used as the basis for detailed case study analysis. The study of internal migration is vital, the authors argue, in order to understand the change process from a centrally planned economic system to a market orientated society in China. The internal mobility of minorities can be regarded equally, as both a product of, and a contributing factor to, this social transformation. This notable and very readable book will be of significant interest to policymakers, international and development economists and researchers and students of Asian economics and demographics.Trade Review'The book is certainly worth reading for those interested in the political and social aspects of internal movement in China today. It focuses on a topic that deserves a great deal more attention in the debates about the social and political consequences of rural-urban mobility in China - both for the urban regions, but also for the regions which migrants leave behind.' -- Mette Halskov Hansen, China Information'Contemporary Minority Migration, Education and Ethnicity in China breaks important new ground in studying the interrelationships of migration, ethnicity and education.' -- Hein Mallee, The China Journal'This is an excellent book that will go a long way in introducing readers to many important and relevant demographic issues of the minorities of China.' -- Dudley L. Poston, Jr. - Journal of Population Research'Offering an in-depth analysis of this internal migration, the book proves indispensable for gaining a better understanding of the changes inherent in China's transition from a planned to a market economy.' -- Isabelle Attane, China Perspectives'Migration scholars will welcome this data-rich treatment of what is currently the most important movement of people world-wide - namely the eight million or more people moving from rural to urban areas in China each year. This is a milestone book, showing extensive and fruitful collaboration between Australian and Chinese scholars. The fieldwork is accomplished and professional, while the results reported are genuinely original and stimulating.' -- Robin Cohen, University of Warwick, UKTable of ContentsContents: 1. Introduction 2. Migration Research Background 3. Ethnicity and Minority Education Policy 4. Overall Minority Movement 5. Inner Mongolia and Mongol Movement 6. Tibet and the Movement of Tibetans 7. Xinjiang and Uyghur Movement 8. Beijing’s Growing Ethnic Minorities 9. Conclusion References Index
£105.00