The Routledge International Handbook of Transnational Studies offers a comprehensive overview of the dynamic evolution and the most recent debates in this interdisciplinary field. The collection assembles scholarship from the social sciences and the humanities that share a critical perspective extending beyond the nation-state. The contributions investigate sustained connections, events, and activities across state borders and acknowledge prevailing global power asymmetries.The handbook examines the dynamics of transnational processes across seven main themes: epistemological and methodological principles; transnational migrant practices and family remittances; mobilities and (self-)identities; social protection; organizations and social movements; culture, religion, and the arts; and architecture and urban planning. The contributors engage with theoretical developments and analyze empirical cases involving a wide array of critical contemporary topics such as expatriate voting, first- and second-generation return migration, state-sponsored cross-border marriages, access to health care, transnational social work, global religious aesthetics, transnational art corridors, literary translation, remittance-financed architecture, and transnational processes of real estate development and gentrification, among others. They display a series of cross-cutting approaches including postcolonial theory, racism, and gender, and a focus on agency, state policies and macro-structures, and transnational inequalities. This book features multidisciplinary scholars in transnational studies from Australia, Belgium, Canada, Finland, Germany, Italy, Malaysia, Mexico, the Philippines, Poland, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and the United States.This handbook will be of interest to scholars interested in global and transnational perspectives across a wide range of disciplines. It will serve as a key resource for academics, students, and other interested audiences seeking to familiarize themselves with the study of contemporary issues that cross state borders.
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This interdisciplinary volume charts the dynamic evolution and diversity of approaches, topics, and disciplinary fields that are now included in transnational studies, presenting contemporary research on a range of subjects relating to transnationalism and identifying new directions for future research.
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An interdisciplinary introduction to transnational studies SECTION 1 Epistemological principles and transnational methodologies 1 - The twilight of transnational migration studies in a conjuncture of dispossession: An epistemological approach 2 - Expanding the critical knowledge potential of transnational migration research: How to study ‘doing migration’ at the intersection of multiple colonialities? 3 - What is new about transnational inequality? SECTION 2 Transnational migrant practices, remittances, and transfers 4 – Migrant transnational political engagement 5 – Remittances, transnationalism, and the making of migrant financial inclusion across North America 6 - Return mobility and transnational intangible transfers: The case of Central and Eastern Europe SECTION 3 Mobilities, identities, and power structures 7 - Second-generation transnational return mobilities 8 – Gendered state interest and marriage migration policies: The Philippines and South Korea 9 - White capital: A transnational story SECTION 4 Social Security, Social Protection and Health 10 - Labyrinths of transnational social protection 11 - Bringing the transnational into social work 12 - Diasporic bureaucracies and transnational social rights: A Mexican health policy in New York City 13 - Transnational medical mobilities SECTION 5 Organizations and Social Movements 14 - Social movements, transnational struggles, and cross-national diffusion: Three waves of research 15 - Transnational labor activism: The international labor movement and beyond 16 - Transnational migrant organizations SECTION 6 Culture, Religion & the Arts 17 – Contemporary art and transnational artivisms in the Americas 18 - Orisha transnational practices and the Africana Matrix 19 - Conviviality and transnationalism – conceptual cross-fertilizations 20 - Translation and postcoloniality SECTION 7 Architecture and Urban Planning 21 - Twin house: Emigrant and Immigrant architectures of transnational labor economies 22 - Migration and architecture: Remitting as a framework for emergent architectural forms 23 - Building dreams back “home”: Transnational urban spatialities of homes, land, and property 24 - Transnational mobility and urban change
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781032360355
Publisert
2024-01-23
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Vekt
453 gr
Høyde
246 mm
Bredde
174 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
346

Biographical note

Margit Fauser is a professor of Sociology at Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany. She is the author of Mobile Citizenship, co-author of Transnational Migration, and a co-editor of Migrations and Border Processes: Practices and Politics of Belonging and Exclusion in Europe from the 19th to the 21st Century, a special issue of the Journal of Borderlands Studies.

Xóchitl Bada is an associate professor of Latin American and Latino Studies at the University of Illinois Chicago, USA. She is co-author of Scaling Migrant Worker Rights: How Advocates Collaborate and Contest State Power and co-editor of The Oxford Handbook of the Sociology of Latin America and Accountability across Borders: Migrant Rights in North America.