Gender and Migration

Gender and Migration

Transnational and Intersectional Prospects

Amelina, Anna; Lutz, Helma

Taylor & Francis Ltd

08/2020

170

Mole

Inglês

9780367583378

15 a 20 dias

312

Descrição não disponível.
1. Gender Relations and Migration: Introduction to the Current State of the Debate (Helma Lutz)



1.1 The Social Construction of Gender



1.2 Intersectionality: Gender and Its Interdependence with Other Social Markers



1.3 Migration



1.4 Gender in the Migration Process: Between (In)visibility and Dramatization



1.5 Conclusion and Outlook



2. Migration and Gender: Researching Migration in National, Global, and Transnational Frameworks (Anna Amelina)



2.1 Gender and Social Inequality: The Challenges of Migration Research



2.2 Key Questions and Limitations of Assimilation Theories



2.3 The Neoclassical Approach and World-Systems Theory: Analyzing International Migration in a Globalized Context



2.4 The Transnational Perspective in Migration Research and Gender-Sensitive Inequality Analysis



2.5 The Interplay of Gender, Ethnicity/Race, and Class from a Transnational Perspective



2.6 Summary and Outlook



3. Doing Migration and Doing Gender: Intersectional Perspectives on Migration and Gender (Anna Amelina)



3.1 Introduction



3.2 Doing Migration: The Social Constructivist Perspective in Migration Research



3.3 Studies of Intersectionality: Analyzing the Interplay of Migration and Gender



3.4 Migration and Gender in the Focus of Intersectionality: The Current Research on Migration and Mobility in Europe



3.5 Conclusion and Outlook



4. Care: An Intersectional Analysis of Transnational Care Work and Transnational Families (Helma Lutz)



4.1 Care as (Un)paid Labor



4.2 Care as Gainful Employment



4.3 Global Care Chains: Transnational Motherhood and Care Circulation



4.4 Transnational Families between Stigmatization and Recognition



4.5 The Intersection of Regimes of Gender, Care/Welfare, and Migration



4.6 Conclusion: The Redistribution of Social Inequality



5. The Changing Face of Citizenship: From the National Model to the Transnational and Intersectional Approaches



5.1 Key Dimensions of Citizenship



5.2 Transnationally Oriented Citizenship Studies: Citizenship in the Process of Deterritorialization



5.3 Challenging "White Androcentrism": Feminist and Intersectional Approaches to Citizenship Research



5.4 "The Limits of Gendered Citizenship": The Intersectional Perspective in Citizenship Research



5.5 Conclusion



6. Teaching Intersections of Gender, Migration and Transnationality (Helma Lutz)



6.1 Cultural Representations and Signifying Practices



6.2. A Proposal for Gender-Sensitive Migration Research: Summary of Chapter 1



6.3 Deconstructing Classical Migration Research from the Perspectives of Gender and Transnational Studies: Summary of Chapter 2



6.4 Intersectional Tools for Transnational Migration Research: Summary of Chapter 3



6.5 Intersectional Analysis of Transnational Care Relations: Summary of Chapter 4



6.6. Citizenship Theories beyond the National Paradigm: Summary of Chapter 5



References
Young Men;Mobile EU Citizen;Gender and Migration;West Germany;Intersectional Prospects;Transnational Service Economy;Helma Lutz;Racialized Social Positions;Anna Amelina;Female Married Migrants;gender;Female Migrant Care Workers;migration;Migrant Care Workers;intersectionality;Social Reproduction;race;Nested Citizenship;diversity;Translocational Frame;globalization;Incorporation Policies;transnationalism;Global Care Chains;social class;Neoclassical Migration Theories;sexuality;Factor Price Equalization;Dual Citizenship;Postnational Citizenship;Gender Sensitive Lens;Transnational Families;Intersectional Perspective;Transnational Social Spaces