Results for 'migrant careworkers'

992 found
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  1. The Moral Harm of Migrant Carework.Eva Feder Kittay - 2009 - Philosophical Topics 37 (2):53-73.
    Arlie Hochschild glosses the practice of women migrants in poor nations who leave their families behind for extended periods of time to do carework in other wealthier countries as a “global heart transplant” from poor to wealthy nations. Thus she signals the idea of an injustice between nations and a moral harm for the individuals in the practice. Yet the nature of the harm needs a clear articulation. When we posit a sufficiently nuanced “right to care,” we locate the harm (...)
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  2.  60
    The Moral Harm of Migrant Carework.Eva Feder Kittay - 2009 - Philosophical Topics 37 (2):53-73.
    Arlie Hochschild glosses the practice of women migrants in poor nations who leave their families behind for extended periods of time to do carework in other wealthier countries as a “global heart transplant” from poor to wealthy nations. Thus she signals the idea of an injustice between nations and a moral harm for the individuals in the practice. Yet the nature of the harm needs a clear articulation. When we posit a sufficiently nuanced “right to care,” we locate the harm (...)
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  3.  46
    Migrant domestic careworkers: Between the public and the private in catholic social teaching.Catherine R. Osborne - 2012 - Journal of Religious Ethics 40 (1):1-25.
    This essay argues that Catholic (magisterial) social teaching's division of ethics into public and private creates a structural lacuna which makes it almost impossible to envision a truly just situation for migrant domestic careworkers (MDCs) within the current horizon of Catholic social thought. Drawing on a variety of sociological studies, I conclude that it is easy for MDCs to “disappear” between two countries, two families, and, finally, two sets of ethical norms. If the magisterium genuinely wishes Catholic ethicists (...)
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  4.  6
    Reproducing the national family: kinship claims, development discourse and migrant caregivers in Palestine/israel.Rachel H. Brown - 2019 - Feminist Theory 20 (3):247-268.
    This article probes the politics of the migrant caregiver/citizen-employer relationship in Palestine/israel as it unfolds within the Jewish-Israeli home. Based on interviews with migrants from the Philippines, Nepal, India and Sri Lanka and their Jewish-Israeli employers, I examine how Israel’s ethno-racially hierarchical citizenship regime and the transnational gendering and racialisation of carework manifest in this relationship. I begin by situating migrant women working as caregivers within the legal and political context of Palestine/israel, delineating how gendered constructions of the (...)
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  5. The Body as the Place of Care.Eva Feder Kittay - 2013 - In Donald A. Landes & Azucena Cruz-Pierre (eds.), Exploring the Work of Edward S. Casey. Bloomsbury Publishing,.
  6.  20
    Careworkers in the global market: Appraising applications of feminist care ethics.G. K. D. Crozier - 2010 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 3 (1):113-137.
    Feminist Care Ethics has much to offer in an analysis of the international migration of care workers. This paper argues, however, that Joan Tronto’s analysis of this international care regime is incomplete insofar as it overlooks the ways in which the current global care market is progressive for the workers and the significant harms this market is inflicting on care receivers in source countries. In order for Feminist Care Ethics to fulfill its potential, it must be developed beyond a visionary (...)
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  7.  5
    Immigrant careworkers and Norwegian gender equality: Institutions, identities, intersections.Marie Louise Seeberg - 2012 - European Journal of Women's Studies 19 (2):173-185.
    This article examines how immigrant careworkers relate dynamically with the Norwegian gender regime. While the importation of careworkers contributes both to the practical maintenance and to the undermining on a more ideological level of the Norwegian gender regime, it also brings in new constellations and possibilities. In this article examples from two studies are discussed in the light of institutional and intersectional perspectives. It describes features of the Norwegian gender regime that are especially relevant to carework, and the (...)
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  8.  44
    Environmental migrants, structural injustice, and moral responsibility.James Dwyer - 2020 - Bioethics 34 (6):562-569.
    Climate change and environmental problems will force or induce millions of people to migrate. In this article, I describe environmental migration and articulate some of the ethical issues. To begin, I give an account of these migrants that overcomes misleading dichotomies. Then, I focus attention on two important ethical issues: justice and responsibility. Although we are all at risk of becoming environmental migrants, we are not equally at risk. Our risk depends on our temporal position, geographical location, social position, and (...)
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  9. Saving Migrants’ Basic Human Rights from Sovereign Rule.Lukas Schmid - 2022 - American Political Science Review:1-14.
    States cannot legitimately enforce their borders against migrants if dominant conceptions of sovereignty inform enforcement because these conceptions undermine sufficient respect for migrants’ basic human rights. Instead, such conceptions lead states to assert total control over outsiders’ potential cross-border movements to support their in-group’s self-rule. Thus, although legitimacy requires states to prioritize universal respect for basic human rights, sovereign states today generally fail to do so when it comes to border enforcement. I contend that this enforcement could only be rendered (...)
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  10.  19
    Crianças Migrantes Dos Países Africanos Na Educação Infantil Paulistana: Entre o Acolhimento e a Exclusão.Flavio Santiago - 2022 - Childhood and Philosophy 18:01-25.
    African migrants in Brazil suffer the perverse effects of xenophobia, in addition to experiencing racist behaviors. These processes also manifest themselves within the context of kindergarten centers and pre-schools, directly influencing the pedagogical approach, as well as the perceptions and conceptions surrounding being a black African person. In this context, this article aims to present the perception of early education teachers in the city of São Paulo about racialization processes in the sheltering and insertion of black African children of ages (...)
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  11.  16
    Exploring migrants’ knowledge and skill in seasonal farm work: more than labouring bodies.Natascha Klocker, Olivia Dun, Lesley Head & Ananth Gopal - 2020 - Agriculture and Human Values 37 (2):463-478.
    Migrant farmworkers dominate the horticultural workforce in many parts of the Minority (developed) World. The ‘manual’ work that they do—picking and packing fruits and vegetables, and pruning vines and trees—is widely designated unskilled. In policy, media, academic, activist and everyday discourses, hired farm work is framed as something anybody can do. We interrogate this notion with empirical evidence from the Sunraysia horticultural region of Australia. The region’s grape and almond farms depend heavily on migrant workers. By-and-large, the farmers (...)
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  12.  7
    Women’s Carework in Low-Income Households: The Special Case of Children with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder.Jacquelyn Litt - 2004 - Gender and Society 18 (5):625-644.
    This article presents qualitative interview data to explore the health-related carework of low-income women caregivers with special-needs children and the implications of carework for women’s financial security. The author documents “direct” and “advocacy” carework as two types of caregiving that low-income women carry out in the context of declining government resources for poor disabled children. The author shows that the unique demands of carework responsibilities and the conditions of low-wage work combine to limit caregivers’ employment and education options as well (...)
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  13.  26
    Mujeres migrantes fronterizas en Tarapacá a principios del siglo XXI. El cruce de las fronteras y las redes de apoyo.Marcela Tapia Ladino & Romina Ramos Rodríguez - 2013 - Polis: Revista Latinoamericana 35.
    La migración fronteriza es un fenómeno que cada día adquiere mayor importancia en el continente en un contexto de crisis de los países del Norte y del fortalecimiento económico de algunos países sudamericanos, como es el caso de Chile. En este sentido, interesa revisar el caso de la migración femenina a la región de Tarapacá en los últimos años, los motivos para migrar, la experiencia del cruce de la frontera y el lugar que ocupan las redes de apoyo en la (...)
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  14.  28
    Mujeres migrantes cuidadoras en flujos migratorios sur-sur y sur-norte: expectativas, experiencias y valoraciones.Elaine Acosta González - 2013 - Polis: Revista Latinoamericana 35.
    El artículo se aproxima a la problemática de la subjetividad y experiencia cotidiana de las mujeres migrantes que ejercen como cuidadoras domésticas en dos destinos migratorios altamente feminizados y con una alta concentración de mujeres inmigrantes en el sector doméstico de cuidados (España y Chile). Con ello se pretende indagar comparativamente en dos flujos migratorios (sur-norte y sur-sur) sobre las expectativas y motivaciones que configuran los modelos migratorios femeninos, el significado del trabajo de cuidado en la inserción laboral de las (...)
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  15.  51
    Migrant filipina domestic workers and the international division of reproductive labor.Rhacel Salazar Parreñas - 2000 - Gender and Society 14 (4):560-580.
    This article examines the politics of reproductive labor in globalization. Using the case of migrant Filipina domestic workers, the author presents the formation of a three-tier transfer of reproductive labor in globalization between the following groups of women: middle-class women in receiving nations, migrant domestic workers, and Third World women who are too poor to migrate. The formation of this international division of labor suggests that reproduction activities, as they have been increasingly commodified, have to be situated in (...)
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  16.  20
    Migrants as educators: reversing the order of beneficence.Senem Saner - 2018 - Journal of Global Ethics 14 (1):95-113.
    The discussion of migrants’ education focuses generally on whether and how host countries should educate their migrant populations, examining the goals and moral principles underlying educational services for immigrants. While apparently innocuous, such formulations of the issue stipulate a framework with clear roles: host countries are posited as providers and immigrants as recipients of services. Host countries are, thus, placed in a hierarchical position of ‘granting’ belonging, ‘granting’ services, ‘granting’ education, as benefactors, whether for the purposes of duty, utility, (...)
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  17.  70
    Undocumented Migrants.Monika Krause - 2008 - European Journal of Political Theory 7 (3):331-348.
    The number of people without rights of residence or work in the territory of Western Europe's nation states is growing. In official representations of political life this group is commonly 'symbolically eliminated' or taken up by an increasingly hostile discourse on 'illegal immigrants' and 'international terrorism'. This article explores what a rereading of the work of Hannah Arendt can contribute to the analytical task of giving an alternative meaning to the presence of this group. Arendt opens up new ways of (...)
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  18.  5
    Migrant Women and Social Reproduction under Austerity.Gwyneth Lonergan - 2015 - Feminist Review 109 (1):124-145.
    Since coming to power in 2010, the UK Coalition government has enacted a series of cuts to public spending, under the auspices of austerity. Underpinning these cuts is a neo-liberal model of citizenship, in which citizens are expected to be autonomous, independent and economically productive, and in which the responsibilities of citizenship outweigh the rights. This model of citizenship is characterised by a paradoxical approach to social reproduction. The Coalition government has taken a significant interest in social reproduction as a (...)
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  19.  19
    Globalization: Migrant nurses' acculturation and their healthcare encounters as consumers of healthcare.Cheryl Zlotnick, Harshida Patel, Parveen Azam Ali, Temitayo Odewusi & Marie-Louise Luiking - forthcoming - Nursing Inquiry:e12607.
    Globally, one of every eight nurses is a migrant, but few studies have focused on the healthcare experiences of migrant nurses (MNs) as consumers or recipients of healthcare. We address this gap by examining MNs and their acculturation, barriers to healthcare access, and perceptions of healthcare encounters as consumers. For this mixed‐methods study, a convenience sample of MNs working in Europe and Israel was recruited. The quantitative component's methods included testing the reliability of scales contained within the questionnaire (...)
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  20.  23
    Migrant farmworker injury: temporality, statistical representation, eventfulness.Seth M. Holmes - 2020 - Agriculture and Human Values 37 (1):237-247.
    This article considers ethnographic field research in order to analyze the violence and exploitation inherent to our transnational agro-food system and the ways in which temporality and statistics may aid in making visible and invisible certain experiences of migrant farmworker injury as well as individual and collective actions for wellbeing. Based in long-term, in-depth ethnographic research, this article utilizes theories of temporality and events in order to highlight social and health inequalities in agricultural labor and encourage agricultural, food and (...)
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  21.  10
    Migrant crisis in Europe: challenges for interreligious relations.Alla Aristova - 2016 - Ukrainian Religious Studies 77:39-45.
    The article of Alla Aristova «Migrant crisis in Europe: challenges for interreligious relations» identifies and classifies main features of the current wave of migration from the Muslim countries to Europe, its differences from the previous migration inflows of the last century, and the potential impact on inter-religious relations, social and religious processes in European society.
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  22.  9
    Migrant and Marginalized Body in Connection with Digital Technologies as a Prosthesis of the Monstrous.Claudia Tazreiter - 2023 - Filozofski Vestnik 44 (2):199-216.
    This article situates the (human) body as a signifier for society at large, arguing that developments in many societies of structural and systematic violence that targets minorities such as refugees and first nation peoples, points to a failure of democratic values. Using two examples, we elaborate technology and digital devices as prosthesis of the body, that are also acting as proxy for state violence. The first example is from the carceral archipelago of Manus Island as a site of remote detention (...)
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  23.  5
    Undocumented migrants’ access to healthcare in Sweden, and the impact of Act 2013:407.Anna O’Sullivan - forthcoming - Nursing Ethics.
    Background Research shows that undocumented migrants have difficulties in accessing healthcare. Act 2013:407 came into force in 2013 and entitled undocumented migrants to healthcare that cannot be deferred. To date, studies about undocumented migrants’ access to care in Sweden and the impact of Act 2013:407 are sparse. Hence, the aim of this study was to describe professionals’ experiences of access to healthcare for undocumented migrants in Sweden and the impact of Act 2013:407. Methods A qualitative design with semi-structured interviews was (...)
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  24.  3
    Migrant Brothers: A Poet’s Declaration of Human Dignity.Patrick Chamoiseau - 2018 - Yale University Press.
    “If justice had a Jericho trumpet, Chamoiseau would be it.”—Junot Díaz As migrants embark on perilous journeys across oceans and deserts in pursuit of sanctuary and improved living conditions, what is the responsibility of those safely ensconced in the nations they seek to enter? Moved by repeated tragedies among immigrants attempting to enter eastern and southern Europe, Patrick Chamoiseau assails the hypocrisy and detachment that allow these events to happen. _Migrant Brothers _is an urgent declaration of our essential interconnectedness that (...)
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  25.  72
    Irregular Migrants: An Alternative Perspective.David Miller - 2008 - Ethics and International Affairs 22 (2):193–197.
    While accepting Carens's view that irregular migrants can rightfully claim from the state protection of human rights, Miller disagrees that such migrants can claim rights of citizenship.
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  26.  85
    Temporary migrants, partial citizenship and hypermigration.Rainer Bauböck - 2011 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 14 (5):665-693.
    Temporary migration raises two different challenges. The first is whether territorial democracies can integrate temporary migrants as equal citizens; the second is whether transnationally mobile societies can be organized democratically as communities of equal citizens. Considering both questions within a single analytical framework will reveal a dilemma: on the one hand, liberals have good reasons to promote the expansion of categories of free-moving citizens as the most effective and normatively attractive response to the problem of partial citizenship for temporary migrants; (...)
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  27.  14
    The Migrant Position: Dynamics of Political and Cultural Exclusion.Shalini Randeria & Evangelos Karagiannis - 2020 - Theory, Culture and Society 37 (7-8):219-231.
    The lives and labour of migrants are increasingly shaped by political precarity and rightlessness in an unevenly globalized world. We argue that ‘undesirableness’ rather than mobility is constitutive of the ‘migrant’ position. Besides underscoring the asymmetrical power relations that define the position of the ‘migrant’ vis-à-vis the receiving state and society, an optic of ‘undesirableness’ also foregrounds the governmental techniques deployed to produce the figure of the ‘migrant’. We suggest that the framing of migrants as ‘unwanted’ is (...)
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  28.  15
    Skilled migrant workplace integration: the choice between pragmatism and critical realism approaches.Thi Tuyet Tran, Roslyn Cameron, Alan Montague, Nuttawuth Nuenjohn & Shea Fan - 2022 - Journal of Critical Realism 21 (3):331-351.
    This article provides a rationale for adopting the critical realism instead of pragmatism paradigm when researching skilled migrants' workplace integration in Australia. While the extant...
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  29.  13
    Migrant Detention, Subalternity, and the Long Road Toward Hegemony.Paddy Farr - 2021 - Ethics and Social Welfare 15 (1):5-19.
    Over the past 25 years, migrant detention and criminalisation has steadily increased in the United States. This state of affairs has triggered social workers to advocate through policy and service on behalf of migrants. In order to evaluate contemporary practice, a critical position is generated through a genealogy of social work practice with migrants where the colonial archeology of contemporary social work practice is found in the history of the settlement movement. Here, an irony becomes apparent within social work. (...)
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  30.  8
    A Migrant Ethic of Care? Negotiating Care and Caring among Migrant Workers in London's Low-Pay Economy.Jane Wills, Jon May, Joanna Herbert, Yara Evans, Cathy McIlwaine & Kavita Datta - 2010 - Feminist Review 94 (1):93-116.
    A care deficit is clearly evident in global cities such as London and is attributable to an ageing population, the increased employment of native-born women, prevalent gender ideologies that continue to exempt men from much reproductive work, as well as the failure of the state to provide viable alternatives. However, while it is now acknowledged that migrant women, and to a lesser extent, migrant men, step in to provide care in cities such as London, there is less research (...)
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  31.  18
    Migrants, State Responsibilities, and Human Dignity.Roger Brownsword - 2021 - Ratio Juris 34 (1):6-28.
    This article addresses two questions: First, how does the value of human dignity distinctively bear on a state’s responsibilities in relation to migrants; and, secondly, how serious a wrong is it when a state fails to respect the dignity of migrants? In response to these questions, a view is presented about the distinction between wrongs that violate cosmopolitan standards and wrongs that violate the standards that are distinctive to a particular community; about when and how the contested concept of human (...)
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  32. International migrant eldercare workers in Italy, Germany, and Sweden: A feminist critique of eldercare policy in the United States.Rosemarie Tong - 2013 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 6 (2):41-59.
    Hiring international migrant eldercare workers to work hard for little pay simply because this traveling workforce needs wages higher than those they would receive back home seems somehow “wrong.” The standard justification for hiring migrants seems more like an excuse than a justification. My purpose in this article, however, is not to condemn people who hire international migrant eldercare workers, but to suggest that these employers as well as their employees are caught in the same moral bind. Depending (...)
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  33.  15
    Mujeres migrantes y misoprostol: aborto privado, escándalo público.Rosana Triviño Caballero - 2012 - Dilemata 10:31-44.
    ¿Por qué recurren las mujeres migrantes a un método abortivo clandestino cuando existen cauces regulados y gratuitos para interrumpir el embarazo? A partir de un caso relatado en una noticia de prensa, el presente trabajo pretende ofrecer argumentos capaces de fundamentar una posible respuesta. Frente al modelo médico hegemónico, el uso del misoprostol extiende el debate no sólo a la identificación de las disfunciones del sistema sanitario español, sino a discursos relacionados con la identidad y a planteamientos autogestionarios de empoderamiento (...)
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  34.  4
    Undocumented migrant mothers and health cuts in Madrid: A gendered process of exclusion.Laura Caballe-Climent - 2018 - European Journal of Women's Studies 25 (1):28-40.
    In 2012 the Spanish government implemented the Royal Decree Law 16/2012 by which undocumented migrants are denied free access to the Spanish healthcare system. In the midst of unemployment, poverty and cuts in social protection, undocumented migrant women are facing multidimensional exclusions whereby austerity measures are having different consequences for women, especially for those who bear the greater brunt of caring roles in the form of mothering. Drawing upon qualitative research in the form of semi-structured interviews in Madrid, this (...)
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  35. Italian Neorealist and New Migrant films as dispositifs of alterity: How borgatari and popolane challenge the stereotypes of nationhood and womanhood?Marianna Charitonidou - 2023 - Studies in European Cinema 20 (1):58-81.
    The article explores the place of women and migrants in Italian Neorealist and New Migrant cinema, arguing that New Migrant cinema continues and reworks key Neorealist tropes and tendencies. It intends to render explicit how an ensemble of films challenge the stereotypes concerning gender, national and cultural identities. Among the figures that are scrutinized are the borgatari, extracomunitari, popolane and terrone. Its main objective is to demonstrate how the cinematic expression of these figures in Italian Neorealist and New (...)
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  36.  5
    Researching Migrant Street Children in Delhi: Ethical Considerations in Practice.Yukti Lamba - 2023 - Ethics and Social Welfare 17 (4):436-448.
    This article is based on qualitative research conducted in Delhi between May 2019 and October 2019 with children from the Salaam Baalak Trust (SBT) as part of a PhD. Data were collected from 30 children in focus group discussions using participatory methods, followed by semi-structured interviews. As the research was conducted among a vulnerable population (migrant street children), every effort was made to conduct the study ethically, including obtaining informed consent and upholding confidentially and anonymity. Careful consideration was given (...)
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  37. Unfree: Migrant Domestic Work in Arab States.[author unknown] - 2022
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  38.  5
    Tied Migrant Labor Market Integration: Deconstructing Labor Market Subjectivities in South Africa.Farirai Zinatsa & Musawenkosi D. Saurombe - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    The South African labor market is characterized by a high degree of inflexibility and complexity which poses significant challenges for both indigenes and migrants looking to be integrated into the labor market. These challenges are likely to be more poignant for international migrants as they face additional barriers owing to a chronically high employment rate, xenophobic sentiments, and racial exclusion. For female tied migrants, gender bias, expressed through migration policies and legislation, adds yet another layer of complexity to long-term aspirations (...)
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  39.  9
    The ‘migrant experience’: An analytical discussion.Vince Marotta - 2020 - European Journal of Social Theory 23 (4):591-610.
    The idea of experience has been taken at face value in scholarly accounts of the migration experience, consequently very little attention has been given to how this idea has acquired its meaning and how it relates to the category of the ‘migration experience’. This article provides an analytical investigation into the nature of the phenomenon known as the ‘migrant experience’; firstly, by examining mediated and non-mediated conceptions of experience as well as an alternative account of experience associated with strangeness/disruption. (...)
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  40.  18
    Migrants by plane and migrants by stork: can we refuse citizenship to one, but not the other?Tim Meijers - 2022 - Ethics and Global Politics 15 (3):69-90.
    States combine the routine refusal of citizenship to migrants with policies that grant newborns of citizens (or residents) full membership of society without questions asked. This paper asks what, if anything, can justify this differential treatment of the two types of newcomers. It explores arguments for differential treatment based on the differential environmental impact, different impact on the (political) culture of the society in question and differences between the positions of the newcomers themselves. I conclude that, although some justification for (...)
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  41.  13
    Migrants’ Art and Writings: Figures of Precarious Hospitality.Nadia Setti - 2009 - European Journal of Women's Studies 16 (4):325-335.
    Time, precarious lives and memories and multiple narrations related to crossing borders constitute the key meanings of a series of contemporary pieces of works produced by migrant artists and writers. Through an analysis of some of their works, this article focuses on some spatio-temporal images, actions and metaphors related to movement. Then it questions the exploration of narratives in visual arts, especially the relationship between imaginary fiction and reality stories. Theatre may become the very place where contemporary tales of (...)
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  42.  17
    Undocumented migrants, vulnerability and strategies of inclusion: A philosophical perspective.Fabio Macioce - 2018 - Constellations 25 (1):87-100.
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  43.  7
    Estudiantes migrantes internos y retornados y sus adversidades en la universidad.Fabiola Cervantes Rincón & Ángel Augusto Landa Alemán - forthcoming - Voces de la Educación:5-14.
    Los y las estudiantes denominados migrantes internos o interregionales, así como los jóvenes migrantes retornados o pertenecientes a la generación 1.5 enfrentan un cúmulo de adversidades que deben sortear durante sus trayectorias escolares en la universidad pública y en muchos de los casos no son visibilizadas ni atendidas por las IES. En el presente ensayo se pretende proveer algunas estrategias que puedan servir de punto de partida para la atención y seguimiento a estos grupos de población estudiantil.
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  44.  11
    Undocumented Migrants and Resistance in the Liberal State.Antje Ellermann - 2010 - Politics and Society 38 (3):408-429.
    This article explores the possibility of resistance under conditions of extreme state power in liberal democracies. It examines the strategies of migrants without legal status who, when threatened with one of the most awesome powers of the liberal state—expulsion—shed their legal identity in order to escape the state’s reach. Remarkably, in doing so, they often succeed in preventing the state from exercising its sovereign powers. The article argues that liberal states are uniquely constrained in their dealing with undocumented migrants. Not (...)
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  45.  39
    Migrant Cosmopolitanism.Thomas Nail - 2014 - Public Affairs Quarterly 29 (2):187–199.
  46. The Figure of the Migrant.Thomas Nail - 2015 - Stanford: Stanford University Press.
    This book offers a much-needed new political theory of an old phenomenon. The last decade alone has marked the highest number of migrations in recorded history. Constrained by environmental, economic, and political instability, scores of people are on the move. But other sorts of changes—from global tourism to undocumented labor—have led to the fact that to some extent, we are all becoming migrants. The migrant has become the political figure of our time. Rather than viewing migration as the exception (...)
  47. Migrants and the Catholic Church in Australia.Adriano Pittarello - 1988 - The Australasian Catholic Record 65 (2).
     
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  48. Paid Migrant Domestic Labour in a Changing Europe: Questions of Gender Equality and Citizenship.[author unknown] - 2016
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  49.  16
    Migrant Hispanic Families of Young Children: An Analysis of Parent Needs and Family Support.Linda S. Behar-Horenstein, Vivian I. Correa & Cheryl L. Beverly - 1995 - Education and Culture 12 (2):3.
  50. Migrant belongings: memory, space, identity.Anne-Marie Fortier - 2000
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