Gendered Returns, Ambivalent Transnationals: Situating Transnationalism in Local Asymmetry
Graduate Student Papers in Feminist Anthropology Award
Keywords:
business/investor migration, gender, class, cosmopolitanism, transnationalism, Nova Scotia Nominee Program, CanadaAbstract
Drawing on interviews with migrants to Halifax, Nova
Scotia, this article illustrates the potential discrepancy between
the aspirations of even the most affluent global migrants and
the local contexts of immigration. Attracted to Canada for its
pluralism, participants sought to contribute to Canadian society
while ensuring new opportunities for female family members.
However, faced with unemployment, participants developed
transnational strategies that reinforced normative gender roles.
Furthermore, these strategies engendered a kind of ambiva
lent transnationalism whereby participants wished to establish
themselves locally but, due to conditions in the site of immi
gration, were compelled to remain highly connected to their
countries of origin.
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Copyright (c) 2012 Catherine Bryan
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