The Difference Gender Makes: State Policy and Contract Migrant Workers in Singapore
In: Asian and Pacific migration journal: APMJ, Band 12, Heft 1-2, S. 75-98
ISSN: 0117-1968
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In: Asian and Pacific migration journal: APMJ, Band 12, Heft 1-2, S. 75-98
ISSN: 0117-1968
In: Asia Pacific population journal, Band 17, Heft 2, S. 5-10
ISSN: 1564-4278
In: Political geography, Band 16, Heft 3, S. 213-240
ISSN: 0962-6298
In this paper, we adopt the view that 'nation' and 'national identity' are social constructions, created to serve ideological ends. We discuss this in the specific empirical context of Singapore's National Day parades. By drawing on officially produced souvenir programmes and magazines, newspaper reports, and interviews with participants and spectators, we analyse the parades between 1965 and 1994, showing how, as an annual ritual and landscape spectacle, the parades succeed to a large extent in creating a sense of awe, wonderment and admiration. Discussion focuses on four aspects of the celebrations: the site of the parades, their display and theatricality, the composition and involvement of parade participants, and parade themes. We also discuss some examples of alternative readings of parade meanings, illustrating how ideological hegemony is not total.
BASE
In: Routledge Handbook of Cosmopolitanism Studies
In: Elgar handbooks in migration
"This 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"--
In: Routledge handbooks
In: Asian studies
"Housing more than half of the global population, Asia is a region characterised by increasingly diverse forms of migration and mobility. Offering a wide-ranging overview of the field of Asian migrations, this new handbook therefore seeks to examine and evaluate the flows of movement within Asia, as well as into and out of the continent. Through in-depth analysis of both empirical and theoretical developments in the field, it includes key examples and trends such as British colonialism, Chinese diaspora, labour migration, the movement of women and recent student migration. Organised into thematic parts, the topics cover: - The historical context to migration in Asia - Modern Asian migration pathways and characteristics - The re-conceptualizing of migration through Asian experiences - Contemporary challenges and controversies in Asian migration practice and policy Contributing to the re-theorising of the subject area of international migration from non-western experience, the Routledge Handbook of Asian Migrations will be useful to students and scholars of migration, Asian development and Asian Studies in general" --
World Affairs Online
In: New mobilities in Asia 2
Human mobility as engine of religious change / Bernardo E. Brown, Brenda S.A. Yeah -- Saving yogis : spiritual nationalism and the proselytizing missions of global yoga / Amanda Lucia -- Renewed flows of ritual knowledge and ritual affect within transnational networks : a case study of three ritual events of the Xinghua (Henghua) communities in Singapore / Kenneth Dean -- Liberalizing the boundaries : reconfiguration of religious beliefs and practice amongst Sri Lankan immigrants in Australia / Jagath Bandara Pathirage -- From structural separation to religious incorporation : a case study of a transnational Buddhist group in Shanghai, China / Weishan Huang -- "10/40 Window" : Naga missionaries as spiritual migrants and the Asian experience / Arkotong Longkumer -- Religion, masculinity, and transnational mobility migrant catholic men and the politics of evangelization / Ester Gallo -- Helping the wounded as religious experience the free Burma rangers in Karen State, Myanmar / Alexander Horstmann -- A multicultural church : notes on Sri Lankan transnational workers and the migrant chaplaincy in Italy / Bernardo E. Brown -- "Bahala Na Ang Diyos" : the paradox of empowerment among Filipino Catholic migrants in South Korea / Bubbles Beverly Neo Asor -- Feeling Hindu : the devotional Sivaist esthetic matrix and the creation of a diasporic Hinduism in North Sumatra / Silvia Vignato -- What makes Aian migrants' religious experience Asian? Janet Alison Hoskins
In: Anthropology, change and development series
In: Family issues in the 21st century
In: Identities: global studies in culture and power, Band 30, Heft 4, S. 568-587
ISSN: 1547-3384
In: Global networks: a journal of transnational affairs, Band 21, Heft 1, S. 3-17
ISSN: 1471-0374
AbstractA growing body of migration scholarship has highlighted the inadequacies of a single‐origin‐single‐destination model for thinking about international migration in our globalizing world. Several terms – onward, stepwise, serial, secondary, triangular, multiple, and transit migration – have been coined to describe these multiple moves within a single migratory lifetime, but the lack of consensus on the terminology to describe these migrations is indicative of the lack of theoretical clarity on this emergent phenomenon. We therefore propose to introduce a new umbrella term, 'multinational migrations', to capture the varied movements of international migrants across more than one overseas destination with significant time spent in each country. The articles presented here bring together researchers investigating multinational migrations across a range of migrant categories and between various migration hubs. They highlight how individual imaginations, aspirations, capabilities and subjectifications interact with multinational migration infrastructures (in the domains of education, tourism, labour, and citizenship) to lead to the adoption of complex multinational migration trajectories.
In: Journal of ethnic and migration studies: JEMS, Band 47, Heft 4, S. 878-894
ISSN: 1469-9451
In: Journal of ethnic and migration studies: JEMS, Band 46, Heft 16, S. 3508-3525
ISSN: 1469-9451