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- ISBN: 9780754670704 | 0754670708
- Cover: Hardcover
- Copyright: 9/28/2007
This volume explores the migration processes of economic migration, the social conditions that follow it and the processes and discourses that underlie research into it. The contributors reflect critically on economic migration and on the process of studying and creating knowledge about it.The contributors address the question of whether recent enquiries into modernity bring a newer and better comprehension of the nature of dislocation and movement, or whether these serve simply to replicate familiar modes of placing people and individuals. The book is organized into perspectives in and on specific continents Europe, Asia and Africa in order to explore notions regarding economic migration within and across regions as well as towards displacing the Eurocentrism of many studies of migration.Contents: Introduction: xenophobia and the academic margins of migration studies, Suman Gupta. Part 1 Europe: Open borders: the case against immigration controls, Teresa Hayter; Economic migrant or hyphenated British? Writing about difference in London's East End, John Eade; Outsourcing and migrational anxieties in discourse perspectives, Tope Omoniyi; Economic satisfaction and nostalgic laments: the language of Bulgarian economic migrants after 1989 in websites and electronic fora, Zhivko Ivanov; The immigrating Russian: the Bulgarian case, Irina Chongarova. Part 2 Africa: The transformative effect of transfer originating from migration of local Moroccan socioeconomic dynamics, Taoufik Agoumy; Economic martyrs: 2 perspectives on 'lahrig', Taieb Belghazi; The cultural consequence of economic migration from Nigeria to the West, Efurosibina Adegbija; From homeland to hopeland? Economic globalization and Ogoni migration in the 1990s, Cyril Obi; Migrancy and Thabo Mbeki's African renaissance, David Johnson. Part 3 Asia: Emigration and sociocultural change in Iran, Taghi Azadarmaki and Mehri Bahar; Imaginary migrations in contemporary Chinese public culture, Yue Daiyun; Media representations in India of the Indian diaspora in UK and US, Subarno Chattarji; Globalising Hunduism, Hinduising India: the paradoxical purposes of the VHP, Tapan Basu; Negotiating the shifting boundaries of nativeness and modernity in immigrant South Asian women's clothes, Vinay Bahl; Contributors; Index.About the Author: Suman Gupta is Director of the Ferguson Centre for African and Asian Studies at the Open University, UK, and is Principal Coordinator of the GIPSC project. He is the author of eight single-authored books, co-editor of five books and has published numerous scholarly papers.Tope Omoniyi is Reader in English Language and Linguistic in the School of Arts, Roehampton University, UK. He has published widely in the field and held lectureships in Africa, Asia and Europe.