For information on how we process your data, read our Privacy Policy
Thank you. We will email you when this book is available to order
You are now leaving the Bloomsbury Publishing website. Your eBook purchase will be with our partner https://www.vitalsource.com.
Your credit card statement will show this purchase originating from VitalSource Technologies. They will also provide any technical assistance you might require.
You must sign in to add this item to your wishlist. Please sign in or create an account
Trager and her coauthors focus on migration not as a single event but as a dynamic process that responds to and is shaped by broader economic, cultural and social forces. Individual essays consider issues of international and internal migration, of voluntary migration and forced movements due to civil conflicts and environmental degradation, and of macro-level forces and micro-level institutions. The authors investigate a wide variety of types of mobility, describe transnational and multilocal networks through which remittances and other flows take place; focus on migrants as active agents; and examine the impacts of ethnicity and assimilation. They offer original studies on Mexico, Puerto Rico, West Africa, Kazakstan, and Mozambique. This new volume will be a valuable resource for researchers and practitioners in development anthropology, migration studies, and international planning and policy.
Published | 13 Oct 2005 |
---|---|
Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 344 |
ISBN | 9798216300175 |
Imprint | AltaMira Press |
Series | Society for Economic Anthropology Monograph Series |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
This volume is an important addition to the literature on migration. It makes a valuable claim for the contributions of anthropology to an understanding of economic dimensions of migration. Several essays also contribute to a growing literature on the meaning and impact of return migration and remittances on sending communities. Above all else the essays in this volume are clearly written and well-grounded in rich ethnographic data from a number of places around the world.
Caroline B. Brettell, Southern Methodist University, Anthropological Quarterly
This volume is a much-needed contribution to our understanding of migration dynamics. It is especially valuable for providing detailed case studies from across the globe that highlight how local contexts profoundly shape a given migrant process. It includes extremely well grounded ethnographic data from extremely diverse cases (Kazakhstan, Puerto Rico, African nations, Latin America), not just the countries we usually hear about in discussions of migration. In particular the strength of the articles on African cases add a completely new picture to migration studies, as this region is so often left out. Yet, reading the entire collection of articles illuminates ways to explore migration from a comparative perspective, and to find issues that echo cross-culturally without losing the insights gained from each case study. The volume is a genuinely new and different contribution with far-reaching implications for migration studies. Important themes revealed throughout the volume include 1) the negotiation processes between migrants and home communities - whether it's negotiation over material, social or symbolic systems, 2) the context-specific potential for beneficial outcomes to sending communities of migration and 3) the need to examine a variety of types o
Lisa Cliggett, University of Kentucky
This volume is a much-needed contribution to our understanding of migration dynamics. It is especially valuable for providing detailed case studies from across the globe that highlight how local contexts profoundly shape a given migrant process. It includes extremely well grounded ethnographic data from extremely diverse cases (Kazakhstan, Puerto Rico, African nations, Latin America), not just the countries we usually hear about in discussions of migration. In particular the strength of the articles on African cases add a completely new picture to migration studies, as this region is so often left out. Yet, reading the entire collection of articles illuminates ways to explore migration from a comparative perspective, and to find issues that echo cross-culturally without losing the insights gained from each case study. The volume is a genuinely new and different contribution with far-reaching implications for migration studies. Important themes revealed throughout the volume include 1) the negotiation processes between migrants and home communities - whether it's negotiation over material, social or symbolic systems, 2) the context-specific potential for beneficial outcomes to sending communities of migration and 3) the need to examine a variety of types of mobility (internal, international, long term, short term, external incentives, internal incentives, etc) in order to better grasp this profoundly important phenomenon of our contemporary world. The volume is an excellent source for researchers and scholars on recent research on migration, and will also be extremely useful in the classroom for courses on globalization, migration, economic development, and economic anthropology.
Lisa Cliggett, University of Kentucky
Get 30% off in the May sale - for one week only
Your School account is not valid for the Australia site. You have been logged out of your account.
You are on the Australia site. Would you like to go to the United States site?
Error message.