Gender, Generations and the Family in International Migration
edited by Albert Kraler, Eleonore Kofman, Martin Kohli and Camille Schmoll
Amsterdam University Press, 2013 eISBN: 978-90-485-1361-1 | Paper: 978-90-8964-285-1 Library of Congress Classification HV4013.E85G46 2011 Dewey Decimal Classification 350
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Family-related migration is moving to the center of political debates on migration, integration, and multiculturalism in Europe. Still, strands of academic research on family migrations and migrant families remain separate from—and sometimes ignorant of—each other. This volume seeks to bridge the disciplinary divide. Collectively, the authors address the need to better understand the diversity of family-related migration and its resulting family forms and practices, to question simplistic assumptions about migrant families in public discourse, to study family migration from a mix of disciplinary perspectives, and to acknowledge the state’s role in shaping family-related migration, practices, and lives.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Albert Kraler is a researcher at the International Centre for Migration Policy Development in Vienna and assiciate lecturer at the University of Vienna. Eleonore Kofman is professor of gender, migration, and citizenship at Middlesex University where she also serves as codirector of the Social Policy Research Center. Martin Kohli is professor of sociology at the European University Institute in Florence and director of the Research Group on Aging and the Life Course at the Free University of Berlin. Camille Schmoll is assistant professor of human geography at Paris Diderot University.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface
Albert Kraler
1. Introduction: Issues and debates on family-related migration and the migrant family: A European perspective
Eleonore Kofman, Albert Kraler, Martin Kohli, and Camille Schmoll Section I: The family as a moral and social order
2. Sex and the regulation of belonging: Dutch family migration policies in the context of changing family norms
Sarah van Walsum
3. Marriages, arranged and forced: The UK debate
Ralph Grillo
4. Filial obligations among immigrants and native Dutch: A comparison of perceptions and behaviour among ethnic groups and generations
Djamila Schans and Helga de Valk
5. Social construction of neglect: The case of unaccompanied minors from Morocco to Spain
Núria Empez Vidal Section II: Gender, generation and work in the migrant family
6. The problem of ‘human capital’: Gender, place and immigrant household strategies of reskilling in Vancouver
Gillian Creese, Isabel Dyck and Arlene Tiger McLaren
7. The transmission of labour commitment within families of migrant entrepreneurs in France and Spain
Christine Catarino and Laura Oso
8. Spousal reunification among recent immigrants in Spain: Links with undocumented migration and the labour market
Amparo González-Ferrer Section III: Marriage migration and gender relations
9. Cross-border marriage as a migration strategy: Thai women in the Netherlands
Panitee Suksomboon
10. Marriage across space and time among male migrants from Cameroon to Germany
Annett Fleischer
11. ‘He’s the Swiss citizen, I’m the foreign spouse’: Binational marriages and the impact of family-related migrations policies on gender relations
Yvonne Riaño Section IV: Transnational family lives and practices
12. Transnational family life and female migration in Italy: One or multiple patterns?
Ludovica Banfi and Paolo Boccagni
13. Civic stratification, stratified reproduction and family solidarity: Strategies of Latino families in Milan
Paola Bonizzoni
14. Gender and intergenerational issues in the circulation of highly skilled migrants: The case of Indian IT professionals
Aurélie Varrel
15. Negotiating transnational caring practices among migrant families
Venetia Evergeti and Louise Ryan
Gender, Generations and the Family in International Migration
edited by Albert Kraler, Eleonore Kofman, Martin Kohli and Camille Schmoll
Amsterdam University Press, 2013 eISBN: 978-90-485-1361-1 Paper: 978-90-8964-285-1
Family-related migration is moving to the center of political debates on migration, integration, and multiculturalism in Europe. Still, strands of academic research on family migrations and migrant families remain separate from—and sometimes ignorant of—each other. This volume seeks to bridge the disciplinary divide. Collectively, the authors address the need to better understand the diversity of family-related migration and its resulting family forms and practices, to question simplistic assumptions about migrant families in public discourse, to study family migration from a mix of disciplinary perspectives, and to acknowledge the state’s role in shaping family-related migration, practices, and lives.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Albert Kraler is a researcher at the International Centre for Migration Policy Development in Vienna and assiciate lecturer at the University of Vienna. Eleonore Kofman is professor of gender, migration, and citizenship at Middlesex University where she also serves as codirector of the Social Policy Research Center. Martin Kohli is professor of sociology at the European University Institute in Florence and director of the Research Group on Aging and the Life Course at the Free University of Berlin. Camille Schmoll is assistant professor of human geography at Paris Diderot University.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface
Albert Kraler
1. Introduction: Issues and debates on family-related migration and the migrant family: A European perspective
Eleonore Kofman, Albert Kraler, Martin Kohli, and Camille Schmoll Section I: The family as a moral and social order
2. Sex and the regulation of belonging: Dutch family migration policies in the context of changing family norms
Sarah van Walsum
3. Marriages, arranged and forced: The UK debate
Ralph Grillo
4. Filial obligations among immigrants and native Dutch: A comparison of perceptions and behaviour among ethnic groups and generations
Djamila Schans and Helga de Valk
5. Social construction of neglect: The case of unaccompanied minors from Morocco to Spain
Núria Empez Vidal Section II: Gender, generation and work in the migrant family
6. The problem of ‘human capital’: Gender, place and immigrant household strategies of reskilling in Vancouver
Gillian Creese, Isabel Dyck and Arlene Tiger McLaren
7. The transmission of labour commitment within families of migrant entrepreneurs in France and Spain
Christine Catarino and Laura Oso
8. Spousal reunification among recent immigrants in Spain: Links with undocumented migration and the labour market
Amparo González-Ferrer Section III: Marriage migration and gender relations
9. Cross-border marriage as a migration strategy: Thai women in the Netherlands
Panitee Suksomboon
10. Marriage across space and time among male migrants from Cameroon to Germany
Annett Fleischer
11. ‘He’s the Swiss citizen, I’m the foreign spouse’: Binational marriages and the impact of family-related migrations policies on gender relations
Yvonne Riaño Section IV: Transnational family lives and practices
12. Transnational family life and female migration in Italy: One or multiple patterns?
Ludovica Banfi and Paolo Boccagni
13. Civic stratification, stratified reproduction and family solidarity: Strategies of Latino families in Milan
Paola Bonizzoni
14. Gender and intergenerational issues in the circulation of highly skilled migrants: The case of Indian IT professionals
Aurélie Varrel
15. Negotiating transnational caring practices among migrant families
Venetia Evergeti and Louise Ryan