Adopting a transnational lens, Immigrants’ Citizenship Perceptions:
Sri Lankans in Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand investigates Sri
Lankan immigrants’ complex views towards their home (Sri Lankan) and
host (Australian or Aotearoa New Zealand) citizenship and the factors
that affect them. The book argues that the existing citizenship
policies and popular discourses towards immigrants have a strong
nation-statist bias in which native citizens believe that they know
how exactly immigrants should behave or feel as host citizens. The
book problematises this assumption by highlighting the fact that it
represents more how immigrants’ citizenship perceptions should be
while ignoring how they actually are. Unlike native citizens,
immigrants must balance two different positions in how they view
citizenship, that is, as native citizens of their home countries and
as immigrants in their host countries. These two positionalities lead
immigrants to a very different perspective of citizenship.
Deliberating on the complexities displayed in Sri Lankan immigrants’
views on their home and host citizenship, the book presents a critical
analysis of citizenship views from immigrants’ standpoint. This book
will hence be useful for policy makers, students, and researchers in
the fields of migration and citizenship as it looks at immigrants’
contextual realities in depth and suggests an alternative approach to
understanding their perceptions of citizenship. “The study is an
in-depth exploration into what makes ‘citizenship’ meaningful to
Sinhalese and Tamil Sri Lankans living in Australia and New Zealand.
Dr. Pavithra Jayawardena presents a rich body of ethnographic material
to argue that immigrant citizenship is a specific human condition
which cannot be stereotyped as it often happens to immigrant
communities from the global South to the global North. Her analysis is
built on a study of the phenomenology of immigrant experience in
relationship in a transnational space. It draws the reader’s
attention to the need for a nuanced and empathic understanding of the
issue of immigrants’ longing for citizenship in a host country. This
is a work that certainly helps formulate better government policy
towards immigrant populations in host countries. Immigrants’
Citizenship Perceptions: Sri Lankans in Australia and Aotearoa New
Zealand is a pioneering contribution to the South Asian scholarship in
the field of South Asian studies.” —Jayadeva Uyangoda, Emeritus
Professor of Political Science, University of Colombo, Sri Lanka "This
is an innovative and—given our contemporary world—timely
contribution to scholarship on citizenship. Exploring ideas of
citizenship from the perspective of immigrants, Dr Jayawardena
presents a sensitive and nuanced discussion of the range of material
and affective factors that impact on how people navigate living in and
belonging to different national communities. Dr Jayawardena’s
approach is well explained and justified. She highlights the
importance of exploring citizenship beyond binaries of ‘host’ and
‘home’ countries and ‘instrumental’ versus ‘patriotic’. By
foregrounding the voices of immigrants themselves she effectively
demonstrates the complex and interconnected nature of these
relationships. Well-grounded in existing debates and literature,
contextually detailed and rich, this book is an excellent resource for
those working in migration, citizenship and diaspora studies."
—Kiran Grewal, Reader in Human Rights, Department of Sociology,
Goldsmiths, University of London
Les mer
Sri Lankans in Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781433189500
Publisert
2022
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter