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Foreword / Mark Matthews -- Preface / Marie McAuliffe and Khalid Koser -- Introduction / Marie McAuliffe and Khalid Koser -- Irregular maritime migration as a global phenomenon / Marie McAuliffe and Victoria Mence -- Placing Sri Lankan maritime arrivals in a broader migration context / Dinuk Jayasuriya and Marie McAuliffe -- The root causes of movement: Exploring the determinants of irregular migration from Afghanistan / Craig Loschmann, Katie Kuschminder and Melissa Siegel -- Seeking the views of irregular migrants: Decision-making, drivers and migration journeys / Marie McAuliffe -- Leaving family behind: Understanding the irregular migration of unaccompanied asylum-seeking minors / Ignacio Correa-Velez, Mariana Nardone and Katharine Knoetze -- Indonesia as a transit country in irregular migration to Australia / Graeme Hugo, George Tan and Caven Jonathan Napitupulu -- The process of Sri Lankan migration to Australia focusing on irregular migrants seeking asylum / Graeme Hugo and Lakshman Dissanayake -- Applications for asylum in the developed world: Modelling asylum claims by origin and destination / Tim Hatton and Joseph Moloney -- Assisted voluntary return and reintegration of migrants: A comparative approach / Khalid Koser and Katie Kuschminder -- Media and migration: Comparative analysis of print and online media reporting on migrants and migration in selected countries / Marie McAuliffe, Warren Weeks and Khalid Koser -- Environmentally related international migration: Policy challenges / Victoria Mence and Alex Parrinder -- Conclusions / Khalid Koser and Marie McAuliffe.
This article examines the dynamics of new media in China with an emphasis on youth uses and practices. While much attention has been devoted to the government's regime of censorship and control, this review takes a cultural approach, drawing from a range of academic and popular sources to examine how various practices, discourses, relationships, and representations have been articulated to new media technologies in China. After providing background on China's demographic and telecommunications landscape, the discussion covers networked community and identity, gaming, networked public sphere and civic engagement, and new media prosumption. The review shows that diverse new media practices emerge in China within the tensions and contradictions of the government's desire to simultaneously expand new media technologies and control what are perceived as "harmful" influences. Within a highly commercialized and more liberalized sociocultural environment, new media technologies have opened up new spaces for multiple modes of expression, and as such, they are constitutive of complex processes of social change in China.
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In: Global Norms, American Sponsorship and the Emerging Patterns of World Politics, S. 206-224
In: WIDER annual lectures 10
Exploring the transition of celebrities into institutional-electoral politics, the book argues that many insights developed by genre theorists could be highly instrumental to understand the celebrity politics phenomenon. It analyzes the historical and cultural specificity of celebrity politics as it evolved through different countries and cultures.
In: Göttingen series in sociological biographical research volume 4
The case studies in this volume illustrate the global dimension of flight and migration movements with a special focus on South-South migration. Thirteen chapters shed light on transcontinental or regional migration processes, as well as on long-term processes of arrival and questions of belonging. Flight and migration are social phenomena. They are embedded in individual, familial and collective histories on the level of nation states, regions, cities or we-groups. They are also closely tied up with changing border regimes and migration policies. The explanatory power of case studies stems from analyzing these complex interrelations. Case studies allow us to look at both "common" and "rare" migration phenomena, and to make systematic comparisons. On the basis of in-depth fieldwork, the authors in this volume challenge dichotomous distinctions between flight and migration, look at changing perspectives during processes of migration, consider those who stay, and counter political and media discourses which assume that Europe, or the Global North in general, is the pivot of international migration.
In: Palgrave studies in international relations series
Old hegemons, new challenges and the limits of traditional responses -- Sponsorship linking resources, legitimacy and institutions -- "If I ruled the world:" imperialism, anti-corruption and the World Bank -- The Bush doctrine and the norms of preemptive and preventive intervention -- Cyberspace, the new frontier - and the same old multilateralism / Panayotis A. Yannakogeorgos -- George W. Bush and the sponsorship of the anti-trafficking norm: a rare success story -- Sponsoring global norms: emerging patterns and policy options in global politics
World Affairs Online
Conditional Cash Transfers are a type of welfare program in which recipients receive funds contingent on certain actions or involvement in activities. Governments and multilateral banks frame conditional Cash Transfers as an effective poverty alleviation strategy that provokes greater civic engagement in the Global South. Mexico's Conditional Cash Transfer program,Oportunidades, includes an educational requirement for children. Studies ofOportunidadesfocus primarily on its impact on student enrollment, but lack research on the quality of education, retention and employment outcomes, and the impact on emigration. Drawing on three years of ethnographic research in a rural indigenous community in the Mexican state of Chiapas, I examine how teachers utilizeOportunidadesconditional requirements as a form of surveillance in the classroom. My findings reveal how emigration in La Gloria and its impact on student retention increases the vulnerability of teachers' employment. These pressures unintentionally help shape how teachers perceive the program – as an intervention to an ongoing culture of migration. Finally, I discuss the impact that surveillance has in shaping educational and migratory aspirations among students and employment outcomes.
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This book focuses on the socio-political problems that emanate from Western states' harsh deterrence policies in their responses to refugee crises. Using Australia's own policy as a lens, it examines the ways in which isolated and separatist reactions not only deny protection and basic human rights for asylum seekers but also do nothing to address structurally enduring push factors. Reflecting on a range of interconnected issues in migration research and asylum policy, this book draws on multidisciplinary insights and a mixed methodology to critically examine current assumptions underlying refugee policies both in Australia and internationally. Professor Fethi Mansouri holds the UNESCO Chair in comparative research on 'Cultural Diversity and Social Justice' and an Alfred Deakin Research Chair in migration and intercultural studies. He is also the founding director of the Alfred Deakin Institute for Citizenship and Globalisation at Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia.
In: Education beyond borders 2
World Affairs Online
In: Journal of world history: official journal of the World History Association, Band 10, Heft 2, S. 441-447
ISSN: 1527-8050
In: International studies review, Band 8, Heft 2, S. 352-354
ISSN: 1521-9488
In: International journal / Canadian Institute of International Affairs, Band 61, Heft 3, S. 773-776
ISSN: 0020-7020
World Affairs Online