989 resultados para transnational migration


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Thèse numérisée par la Division de la gestion de documents et des archives de l'Université de Montréal

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Increased mass migration, as a result of economic hardship, natural disasters and wars, forces many people to arrive on the shores of cultures very different from those they left. How do they manage the legacy of the past and the challenges of their new everyday life? This is a study of immigrant women living in transnational families that act and communicate across national borders on a near-daily basis. The research was carried out amongst immigrant women who were currently living in Finland. The research asks how transnational everyday life is constructed. As everyday life, due to its mundane nature, is difficult to operationalise for research purposes, mixed data collection methods were needed to capture the passing moments that easily become invisible. Thus, the data were obtained from photographic diaries (459 photographs) taken by the research participants themselves. Additionally, stimulated recall discussions, structured questionnaires and participant observation notes were used to complement the photographic data. A tool for analysing the activities devealed in the data was created on the assumption that a family is an active unit that accommodates the current situation in which it is embedded. Everyday life activities were analysed emphasizing social, modal and spatial dimensions. Important daily moments were placed on a continuum: for me , for immediate others and with immediate others . They portrayed everyday routines and exceptions to it. The data matrix was developed as part of this study. The spatial dimensions formed seven units of activity settings: space for friendship, food, resting, childhood, caring, space to learn and an orderly space. Attention was also paid to the accommodative nature of activities; how women maintain traditions and adapt to Finnish life or re-create new activity patterns. Women s narrations revealed the importance of everyday life. The transnational chain of women across generations and countries, comprised of the daughters, mothers and grandmothers was important. The women showed the need for information technology in their transnational lives. They had an active relationship to religion; the denial or importance of it was obvious. Also arranging one s life in Finnish society was central to their narrations. The analysis exposed everyday activities, showed the importance of social networks and the uniqueness of each woman and family. It revealed everyday life in a structured way. The method of analysis that evolved in this study together with the research findings are of potential use to professionals, allowing the targeting of interventions to improve the everyday lives of immigrants.

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Something new is happening to reverse the historical trend of skilled Scots moving to London for career progression. The Scottish population of London and the South East is falling and this despite Scots enjoying continued occupational success within the South East labour market. The authors ask why Scots are leaving the UK's main escalator region and then investigate how these migration changes can best be theorised relative to literature on the mobility of the 'new service class'. Building on Fielding's escalator region hypothesis, the authors report on recent research on longer distance flows out of the UK's main escalator region. They advance the critique of the escalator region hypothesis set out by Findlay et al and ask why people would leave a global city offering good opportunities for occupational mobility. Demographic regime change provides only a partial answer. Other explanations can be found in the changing mobilities of the new service class as they engage in what Smith has defined as 'translocal' and 'transnational' urbanism. The authors argue that Scotland's changing relationship with London and the South East may be representative of a wider set of changes in migration linkages between regional economies and global cities.

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This paper is an attempt to integrate heritage and museum studies through exploring the complex relationship between the materiality of architecture and social memories with a house museum of return migration in Guangdong, PRC as a case study. It unveils that the ongoing process of memory is intrinsically intertwined with spatial and temporal dimensions of the physical dwelling and built environment and the wider social-historical context and power relations shaping them. I argue that it is the house as ‘object of exhibit’ just as much as the exhibits inside the house that materialises the turbulent and traumatic migratory experience of Returned Overseas Chinese, embodies their memories and exposes the contested nature of museumification. By looking at the socially and geographically marginalised dwelling of return migrants, the house draws people’s attention to the often neglected importance of conceptual periphery in re-theorising what is often assumed to be the core of heritage value. It points to the necessity to integrate displaced, diasporic, transnational subjects to heritage and museum studies that have been traditionally framed within national and territorial boundaries.

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Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, Vol.34, n.2,pp. 253 — 269

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Cette recherche s’intéresse à la migration des Mexicains au Canada sous la forme de l’asile, flux migratoire que le Canada a tenté de contrer en resserrant ses frontières. Cette exclusion s’est produite simultanément à celle vécue par les Mexicains vivant ou désirant se rendre aux États-Unis. Ainsi, en Amérique du Nord, dans un contexte de profonde intégration économique, la majorité des Mexicains sont privés d’accès à la mobilité et par conséquent de la possibilité de jouir de droits à travers les frontières. Ce phénomène engendre un régime hiérarchisé de citoyenneté au sein de cet espace. Intimement reliée aux thèmes de l’inclusion / exclusion, la citoyenneté est surtout conceptualisée comme un statut rattaché à l’État ou comme un ensemble de droits dérivant de ce statut. Cette recherche met l’emphase sur de nouvelles manières d’appréhender ce concept, telles la citoyenneté comme un processus hégémonique ou comme une pratique. Ainsi, nous tentons de connaître les raisons pour lesquelles les Mexicains ont demandé l’asile à Montréal (Canada) et de quelles façons ces motifs peuvent être reliés à la citoyenneté. Nous cherchons à vérifier si l’exclusion des Mexicains aux États-Unis a un rôle à jouer dans cette migration. Nous explorons aussi la correspondance entre ce flux migratoire et le concept d’acte de citoyenneté, théorisé par Isin (2008), qui fait référence à une pratique où les individus revendiquent des droits, même s’ils ne possèdent pas le statut de citoyen. Les conclusions de cette recherche nous apprennent que les Mexicains ont demandé l’asile en raison d’une privation de citoyenneté substantielle au Mexique, fortement reliée à la formation de l’espace nord-américain. Par ailleurs, les demandes d’asile sont des conséquences directes de l’exclusion des Mexicains de cet espace. Qui plus est, elles coïncident avec la notion d’« acte de citoyenneté ». Finalement, le résultat de cet acte, qui cherchait l’inclusion et l’acquisition de droits, s’avère mitigé et inégal.