Children moving ‘home’? Everyday experiences of return migration in highly skilled households
Through its focus on children and return migration, this article addresses two invisibilities within migration research. It presents the experiences of children as equal movers in returning households, drawing on research with them in their domestic spaces. Exploring how children negotiate coming ‘h...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Childhood (Copenhagen, Denmark) Denmark), 2010-05, Vol.17 (2), p.243-257 |
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description | Through its focus on children and return migration, this article addresses two invisibilities within migration research. It presents the experiences of children as equal movers in returning households, drawing on research with them in their domestic spaces. Exploring how children negotiate coming ‘home’ and highlighting their experiences from their own perspective promotes an understanding of the everyday practices that underpin return migration. It reveals differences between children and their parents to highlight what can be lost in accounts of migration through the exclusion of children’s experiences. In particular, it shows how children engage in more mobile, transient and smaller-scale homemaking practices. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1177/0907568210365747 |
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Everyday experiences of return migration in highly skilled households</atitle><jtitle>Childhood (Copenhagen, Denmark)</jtitle><date>2010-05-01</date><risdate>2010</risdate><volume>17</volume><issue>2</issue><spage>243</spage><epage>257</epage><pages>243-257</pages><issn>0907-5682</issn><eissn>1461-7013</eissn><coden>CHILFF</coden><abstract>Through its focus on children and return migration, this article addresses two invisibilities within migration research. It presents the experiences of children as equal movers in returning households, drawing on research with them in their domestic spaces. Exploring how children negotiate coming ‘home’ and highlighting their experiences from their own perspective promotes an understanding of the everyday practices that underpin return migration. It reveals differences between children and their parents to highlight what can be lost in accounts of migration through the exclusion of children’s experiences. 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source | Sociological Abstracts; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); SAGE Publications |
subjects | Childhood Attitudes Children Children & youth Everyday life Family (Sociological Unit) Family Environment Family Relationship Foreign Countries Home Homemakers Households Immigrants Migration Migration Patterns Mobility Parents Photography Return Migration Singapore Skills Social mobility United Kingdom |
title | Children moving ‘home’? Everyday experiences of return migration in highly skilled households |
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