5. Migration and Globalisation Flashcards
1
Q
- Acceleration
A
- There has been a speeding up of the rate of migration.
* UN: Between 2000 and 2013, international migration increased by 33% to reach 3.2% of the world’s population
2
Q
- Differentiation
A
- Many types of migrant (e.g. refugees, temporary workers, spouses)
- Globalisation is increasing the diversity of migrants.
- Vertovec: Migrants now come from a much wider range of countries.
- Individuals differ in terms of their legal status (citizens or spouses), culture and religion.
- Vertovec calls this: ‘super diversity’
- Cohen: distinguished 3 types of migrant
- Citizens: full citizenship rights.
- Denizens: privileged foreign nationals welcomed by the state
- Helots: most exploited group. State / Employers see them as a disposable unit of labour.
3
Q
- Feminisation of Migration
A
- Almost half of all global migrants are female.
- Globalisation of gender division of labour
- Enrenreich and Hochschild: care, domestic and sex work in western countries is increasingly done by women from poor countries.
4
Q
- Migrant Identities
A
- Migrants may develop hybrid identities
- Eade: second generation Bangladeshi Muslims in Britain created hierarchical identities. (Muslim first, then Bengalis, then British)
5
Q
- Transnational Identities
A
- Eriksen: Globalisation has created more diverse migration patterns
- Migrants less likely to see themselves as belonging completely to 1 culture.
- Eriksen describes Chines migrants in Rome who found Mandarin more useful for everyday life than Italian. (simply for global connections)
6
Q
- Politicisation of Migration
A
- Assimilation: first state policy approach to immigration.
- Aimed to encourage immigrants to adopt the ways of the host culture
- However, these face problem of transnationals who wish not to abandon culture
- Castles: assimilationist policies are counter productive (mark out minority groups as different leading to them responding by emphasizing differences more radically)
- Castles and Kosack: assimilationist policies benefit capitalism by creating a racially divided working class (through workers blaming migrants for social problems)
- Multiculturalism: accepts migrants may wish to retain a separate cultural identity.
- Eriksen: This acceptance can be limited. (distinguished between shallow and deep)
- Shallow diversity: e.g. regarding chicken tikka masala as Britain’s national dish
- Deep diversity: e.g. arranged marriages (not acceptable to the state)
- Critics argue multicultural education policies celebrate shallow diversity and fail to address deeper problems such as racism.
- 1960s: move towards MC
- Since 9/11: move back to assimilation. (e.g. France: veiling made illegal)
7
Q
Summary
A
- Acceleration
- Differentiation
- Feminisation of Migration
- Migrant Identities
- Transnational Identities
- Politicisation of Migration