Rethinking Privilege and Social Mobility in Middle-Class Migration -

Rethinking Privilege and Social Mobility in Middle-Class Migration

Migrants ‘In-Between’
Buch | Softcover
238 Seiten
2023
Routledge (Verlag)
978-0-367-54082-1 (ISBN)
49,85 inkl. MwSt
This volume explores the experiences of a wide variety of middle-class or ‘middling’ migrant groups across the globe, asking how relatively privileged migrant groups negotiate their life trajectories and aspirations while ‘on the move’ and how they potentially transform the communities and societies that they move both from and to.
This volume explores the experiences of a wide variety of middle-class migrant groups across the globe, including ‘ethnic entrepreneurs’ building new businesses in cosmopolitan neighbourhoods in Sydney; Chinese grandparents shuttling between Australia, China and Singapore to support their extended families; well-off young Indians in Mumbai strategising their future education pathways overseas; and Japanese mothers finding ways to belong in a London middle-class neighbourhood. This book asks how relatively privileged migrant groups negotiate their life trajectories, relationships and aspirations while ‘on the move’ and how they transform the communities and societies that they move between across time and space. The book’s chapters consider motives for migration, as well as experiences of risk, uncertainty and insecurity in diverse local contexts. A fresh look at the migration of those who possess skills and resources that can bring about significant economic, social and cultural change, this book engages critically with the notions of ‘middling’ migration, social mobility and mobile privilege in the global context of hardening borders and immigration complexity. It will appeal to scholars with interests in contemporary forms of migration and mobility and their local and transnational consequences.

Shanthi Robertson is an Associate Professor in the School of Humanities and Communication Arts and Research Fellow in the Institute for Culture and Society at Western Sydney University, Australia. She is the author of Transnational Student-Migrants and the State: The Education-Migration Nexus and Temporality in Mobile Lives: Contemporary Asia-Australia Migration and Lived Time Rosie Roberts is a Senior Lecturer within UniSA Creative and a researcher at the Creative People, Products and Places Research Centre (CP3) at the University of South Australia. She is the author of Ongoing Mobility Trajectories: Lived Experiences of Global Migration.

1. Migrants ‘In-Between’: Rethinking Privilege and Social Mobility in Middle-Class Migration Part I: Relocating Class: Reconfigurations of Class Through Migration 2. The Classed Frustrations of Middling Migrants from China in Australia: Suzhi Discourse Meets the Neoliberal Logics of Selective Migration Policies 3. Shifting Privileges: An Ethnographic Study of White and Upper-Class Colombian Migrant Women Living in Melbourne, Australia 4. Mobile Lives in Search of Place: Homelessness and Frustrated Mobility Among Young Romanians in Madrid Part II: Place, Taste and Aspiration: Local Geographies and Middleclass Imaginaries 5. Suburban Strivers and the South Bombay Elite: How Localised Micro-Categories of Class Shape International Education in Mumbai 6. Migrant Entrepreneurs and Urban Cultural Economy in Sydney, The ‘City of Villages’: Haymarket’s ‘Chinatown’ and Leichhardt’s ‘Little Italy’ 7. The View of Lifestyle Migration: A Brief Exploration of the Ethics of Seeking a Better Way of Life 8. Navigating Everyday Life in a Middle-Class Neighbourhood: The Ongoing Negotiations of Japanese Women Migrants in Southeast London Part III: Relational Dynamics: Middleclass Migrant Families and Couples 9. ‘Moving Privilege’: Middling Transnational Couples and the Relational Dimensions of Privilege 10. Mothers in the Middle: Rethinking Middling Migration as Relational 11. Mainland Chinese Grandparenting Migration as Middling Transnationalism: Family, Life Stage and Lifecourse

Erscheinungsdatum
Reihe/Serie Studies in Migration and Diaspora
Verlagsort London
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 234 mm
Gewicht 453 g
Themenwelt Sozialwissenschaften Ethnologie
Sozialwissenschaften Politik / Verwaltung
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie
ISBN-10 0-367-54082-7 / 0367540827
ISBN-13 978-0-367-54082-1 / 9780367540821
Zustand Neuware
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