Globalisation and Migration: New Issues, New Politics

Front Cover
Ronaldo Munck
Routledge, Sep 13, 2013 - Political Science - 249 pages

This book critically examines the new issues and new politics regarding migration in the era of globalisation from a majority world perspective. It examines the current shifts in the global political economy and the effects it has, for example, in relation to rural displacement. When and how does this lead to national and/or transnational migration? We need to examine the ways in which migration is cut across and impacts on the generation of racism and xenophobia in the west. The issue of remittances by migrants to the ‘developing’ nations needs careful study as does the controversial issue of ‘brain drain’ versus ‘brain gain’ through migration. The growing importance of trafficking for forced labour has now been taken up by various international bodies but is it the new normality or simply an unfortunate side effect of globalisation to be overcome through legislation? Migration is becoming increasingly gendered in its composition and flows but also in the receiving countries where men and women do very different jobs. We can predict the increasing racialization and gendering of migration but how will the state and society respond to these shifts?

This book was published as a special issue of Third World Quarterly.

 

Contents

Notes on Contributors
Globalisation International Labour Migration and the Rights of Migrant
The Ideal Immigrant? Gendered class subjects in PhilippineCanada
the inconvenient realities of African migration
a fortress South
the ambivalent relationship between
labour
Remittances are Beautiful? Gender implications of the new global
from policy panacea to migrant
historical and structural components
Index
Copyright

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About the author (2013)

Ronaldo Munck is based at Dublin City University and is a well-known specialist on labour in the era of globalisation.

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