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Second-Generation Transnationalism and Roots Migration: Cross-Border Lives

Autor Susanne Wessendorf
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 11 oct 2016
Second-Generation Transnationalism and Roots Migration represents the first comprehensive study of second-generation transnationalism, exploring the manner in which the children of migrants grow up amid travel back and forth between the country of origin and the country of immigration, while at the same time forming social attachments locally with people of other origins. Presenting rich empirical data gathered among second-generation Italians in Switzerland and southern Italy, and drawing on studies undertaken in other parts of Europe and in North America and Australia, this book investigates why as adults, members of the second generation maintain diverging transnational relations, with some sharing their parents' transnational ties and fostering social relations with co-ethnics, whilst others distance themselves from co-ethnics and rarely visit their country of origin. Yet others decide to relocate to their country of origin, a phenomenon the book conceptualizes as 'roots migration'. A rigorous exploration of the complex interplay of political, cultural and socio-economic factors in shaping the intergenerational reproduction of transnational ties, Second-Generation Transnationalism and Roots Migration will appeal to sociologists, anthropologists and geographers, with interests in migration and ethnicity, and the interrelationship of transnationalism and integration in immigration societies.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781138251205
ISBN-10: 1138251208
Pagini: 190
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Notă biografică

Susanne Wessendorf is Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Germany, and co-editor of The Multiculturalism Backlash: European Discourses, Policies and Practices.

Recenzii

’Full of wonderfully rich and absorbing material, this well-written ethnographic study of second-generation Italians in Switzerland and southern Italy provides important insights into how and why the adult children of migrants maintain ties with their parents’ country of origin - a topic that is central to our understanding of contemporary immigration.’ Nancy Foner, Hunter College and City University of New York, USA ’This book is a welcome addition to theory building and ethnographic literature about the second generation. Aptly deploying concepts of transnational social fields, ways of belonging and home making, Wessendorf traces migrant networks beyond ethnically defined activities and identities. By abandoning an ethnic lens she provides a multi-sited description of how people of migrant backgrounds form social relations in villages of Italy and urban Switzerland.’ Nina Glick Schiller, University of Manchester, UK

Cuprins

Chapter 1 Introduction: Social Affiliations and Ethnicity in the Context of Second-Generation Transnationalism; Chapter 2 Transnational Childhoods: Growing Up in Transnational Families; Chapter 3 Transnational Continuities, Ethnic Reification and Local Ties; Chapter 4 Transnational Discontinuities: Developing Local Attachments; Chapter 5 Transnational Realizations and Relocation to the Homeland: Roots Migration; Chapter 6 Conclusion: Individual Trajectories of Transnationalism and Integration;

Descriere

Presenting rich empirical data gathered among second-generation Italians in Switzerland and southern Italy, and drawing on studies undertaken in other parts of Europe and the US, this book investigates why as adults, members of the second generation maintain diverging transnational relations, with some sharing their parents' transnational ties and fostering social relations with co-ethnics, whilst others distance themselves from co-ethnics and rarely visit their country of origin. Yet others decide to relocate to their country of origin, a phenomenon the book conceptualizes as 'roots migration'.