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E-grāmata: Migration in the 21st Century: Political Economy and Ethnography

Edited by (Dalhousie University, Canada), Edited by (Trent University, Canada)
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This edited collection focuses on global migration in its inter-regional, international and transnational variants, and argues that contemporary migration scholarship is significantly advanced both within anthropology and beyond it when ethnography is theoretically engaged to grapple with the social consequences and asymmetries of twenty-first century capitalism’s global modalities. Drawn from settings across the globe, case studies explore the nuanced formations of class and power within particular migration flows while addressing the complex analytics of a contemporary critical political economy of migration. Subjects include global migrants as capitalists, entrepreneurs and "cosmopolitans," as well as workers and immigrants who are subject to varying degrees of precariousness under intensified competition for profits within contemporary global economies. By re-addressing the question of the relationship between changes in global capitalism and migration, the book aims for a timely intervention into the debates on migration which have come to be one of the most contentious emotionally fraught issues in North America and Europe.

Acknowledgements ix
1 Migration, Political Economy, and Ethnography
1(16)
Pauline Gardiner Barber
Winnie Lem
PART I Perspectives
2 Panoptics of Political Economy: Anthropology and Migration
17(21)
Winnie Lem
3 Migration and Development without Methodological Nationalism: Towards Global Perspectives on Migration
38(26)
Nina Glick Schiller
4 Theorizing Transnational Movement in the Current Conjuncture: Examples from/of/in the Asia Pacific
64(25)
Donald M. Nonini
PART II Cases
5 With Crossings in My Mind: Trinidad's Multiple Migration Flows, Policy, and Agency
89(20)
Belinda Leach
6 Selecting, Competing, and Performing as `Ideal Migrants': Mexican and Jamaican Farmworkers in Canada
109(23)
Janet McLaughlin
7 In Search of Hope: Mobility and Citizenships on the Canadian Frontier
132(21)
Lindsay Bell
8 Constructing a "Perfect" Wall: Race, Class, and Citizenship in US-Mexico Border Policing
153(22)
Josiah McC. Heyman
9 The Aftermath of a Rape Case: The Politics of Migrants' Unequal Incorporation in Neoliberal Times
175(21)
Bela Feldman-Bianco
10 Gender, Migration, and Rural-Urban Relations in Post-socialist China
196(19)
Yan Hairong
11 "Value Plus Plus": Housewifization and History in Philippine Care Migration
215(21)
Pauline Gardiner Barber
Catherine Bryan
12 Migration, Political Economy, and Beyond
236(7)
Pauline Gardiner Barber
Winnie Lem
Contributors 243(4)
Index 247
Pauline Gardiner Barber is Professor in the Department of Sociology and Social Anthropology at Dalhousie University.



Winnie Lem is Professor of International Development Studies at Trent University.