Migration in History: Human Migration in Comparative Perspective (review)
In: Journal of social history, Band 42, Heft 4, S. 1089-1091
ISSN: 1527-1897
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In: Journal of social history, Band 42, Heft 4, S. 1089-1091
ISSN: 1527-1897
In: Prokla: Zeitschrift für kritische Sozialwissenschaft, Band 140, S. 393-406
ISSN: 0342-8176
In: The Volume and Dynamics of International Migration and Transnational Social Spaces, S. 1-29
In: Marxistische Blätter, Band 37, Heft 4, S. 46-55
ISSN: 0542-7770
In: Journal of refugee studies, Band 11, Heft 2, S. 208-209
ISSN: 0951-6328
In: Gender, Space and Society Ser.
Cover -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- List of illustrations -- Acknowledgements -- Glossary of Spanish terms -- 1. Introduction -- Feminist geographies -- How crises created a transnational community -- Gender and itinerant migrations -- Bolivian migrations in context -- Intersectionality -- Methodology -- Structure of the book -- A note on the use of 'community' -- 2. Gender, migration, and social transformation -- Feminist geographies of migration -- Gender as necessary but not sufficient -- Intersectionality -- Emergent critiques of intersectionality -- Transnationalism -- The emancipatory potential of migration -- Autonomy -- Notes -- 3. Origins -- Tracing elusive origins -- The mining town -- The creation of a new 'community': the informal urban settlement -- Gender relations -- Feminisation of Bolivian migrations -- Gendered mobilities from the Cochabamba neighbourhood -- Conclusion -- Notes -- 4. Mobility and social networks -- Border crossings -- Social networks -- Sequencing -- Motivation: predominance of the material? -- Conclusion -- Notes -- 5. Work -- Work in the mining centre -- Work in Cochabamba after internal migration -- From the mine to garment workshops: work in Argentina -- Spain -- Does migration lead to social mobility? -- Becoming breadwinners -- Notes -- 6. Care -- Negotiating social reproduction in transnational social fields -- Care as a reason for migrating -- Family separations -- The challenges of combining migration with parenting -- Transnational parenting -- Changes in gender roles during separations -- Combining migration with family life -- The migrants' parents -- Conclusion -- 7. Intimacy -- Intimacy and itinerant migration -- Leaving children behind -- Consequences -- Migration and domestic violence.
In: IZA Discussion Paper No. 8922
SSRN
Working paper
In: Münchner Beiträge zur Volkskunde 44
In: The world today, Band 70, Heft 4, S. 12-20
ISSN: 0043-9134
Hampshire, James: Millions on the move. - S. 14-15
World Affairs Online
In: National Institute economic review: journal of the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, Band 198, S. 36-39
ISSN: 1741-3036
Recent developments in the European Union have raised immigration as an issue, especially in the UK. There has been a large wave of migrants into the UK from Poland since its accession in 2004, and as Romania and Bulgaria are preparing to become members of the European Union on 1 January 2007, migration from the new member states to other EU countries has become even more a focus of attention. Concerns over potential immigration towards the old EU member states have been rising because the total population of Bulgaria and Romania is approximately 30 million, a similar size to Poland, and the standards of living in both countries are considerably lower than in the EU-15 member countries, or than in any of the current New Member States. Hence outward migration is more likely to be attractive. The scale of flows will depend upon any restrictions that might be imposed by other member states, but current estimates suggest that 2 million Romanians, for instance, are already at work in the core EU countries.
In: Global Media and Communication Ser.
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Acknowledgements -- 1. Introduction -- Transnational Topographies of Affiliation -- Migration and Mediations -- Text: Point of View and Flow -- Notes -- 2. Legitimacy: Accumulating Status -- Revisioning Citizenship -- Languaging Bodies -- Visible Invisibility -- Bio-Scripts and Aspirations -- Circulatory Politics -- Notes -- 3. Recognition: Politics and Technologies -- Digital Hunt -- Faces, Facing, and Defacing -- Cultures of Fear and Technologies of Recognition -- Notes -- 4. Publics: Eyeing Gender -- Uncovering the Alien Within -- Modes of Publicizing Difference -- Staging of the Modern Citizen -- Conclusion -- Notes -- 5. Domesticity: Digital Visions and Versions -- Techno Publics and Affect -- Digital Domesticity and Diaspora -- Cosmopolitics of Flexible Taste -- Places lived and remembered -- Culinary flexibility -- Gendered politics and mobile texts -- Conclusion -- Notes -- 6. Authenticity: Pursuits of Auras -- Negotiating Auras -- Re-Sounding Authenticity -- Identity as Cultural Literacy -- Digital Classicism -- Educating the Diaspora -- Presentations of the Authentic -- Notes -- 7. Conclusion: Destinations and Beginnings -- Document Power -- Other Anxieties -- Space Claims -- Neoliberal Logics -- Notes -- References -- Index -- End User License Agreement.
In: Ethica Bd. 20
In: Schöningh, Fink and mentis Religious Studies, Theology and Philosophy E-Books Online, Collection 2007-2012, ISBN: 9783657100088
Sind Staaten moralisch dazu berechtigt, die Zuwanderung auf ihr Territorium nach eigenem Ermessen zu beschränken? Ist das Recht auf Ausschluss ein legitimer Bestandteil der nationalen Selbstbestimmung? Oder sollten Staaten vielmehr einen moralischen Anspruch auf globale Bewegungsfreiheit anerkennen? Über diese Fragen ist in den letzten Jahren insbesondere im englischen Sprachraum eine philosophische Debatte in Gang gekommen. Der Band 'Migration und Ethik' macht deren zentrale Positionen einem deutsch sprachigen Publikum zugänglich und führt die Diskussion kontrovers fort. Thematisiert wird dabei nicht nur, ob Staaten Einwanderungs willige abweisen dürfen, sondern auch, ob niedergelassene Einwanderer einen Anspruch auf die vollen Bürgerrechte haben und wozu wir gegenüber ›Wirtschaftsflüchtlingen‹ und irregulären Migrantinnen verpflichtet sind. Das Buch thematisiert so wesentliche Stränge der migrationsethischen Debatte und liefert eine fundierte Auseinandersetzung mit Fragen, die in einer globalisierten Welt stetig an Bedeutung gewinnen. Mit Beiträgen von Joseph H. Carens, Andreas Cassee, Robin Celikates, Francis Cheneval, Anna Goppel, Carsten Köllmann, Bernd Ladwig, Urs Marti, David Miller, Martino Mona, Johan Rochel, Peter Schaber, Stephan Schlothfeldt, Michael Walzer, Simone Zurbuchen
This study explores the global regulative function of migration politics. Its main aim is to rethink migration politics through an engagement with the Foucauldian governmentality perspective, which focuses on the relation between government and thought. A secondary aim is to use this perspective to explore the global description of migration and migration politics which is emerging with the currently evolving global governance of migration. Doing so, it wishes to contribute both to the study of global governmentality, i.e. to the orientation of research which applies elements from governmentality in order to understand global processes of rule, and to the study of the global governance of migration. The task is addressed at three different levels of abstraction. First, it elaborates on an understanding of the state system as a governmental regime aiming at regulating the world population, in order to understand the sovereign prerogative to control migration therein. Second, it places the regulation of movement within the historical continuity of governmental concerns with managing circulation. Third, it explores current governmental thought on migration, to this end tracing the political rationality of governing migration from the global description of migration and migration politics. Its findings suggest that when the circulation of migration is addressed as a global concern, it is being conceptualized in a way which both furthers and modifies state system governmentality. Migration is understood as a normal rather than an exceptional feature of world affairs, and societies are recognized as to a significant degree transnational in character. The commonly used term "migration management" suggests the need to take control over movements in this context. It also signals the possibility for finding rational solutions in order to optimize migration, maximizing its potential benefits and minimizing its associated dangers.
BASE
In: Soziale Beziehungen im Migrationsverlauf, S. 29-43