1. Gender Relations and Migration: Introduction to the Current State of the Debate (Helma Lutz)
1.1 The Social Construction of Gender
1.2 Intersectionality: Gender and Its Interdependence with Other Social Markers
1.3 Migration
1.4 Gender in the Migration Process: Between (In)visibility and Dramatization
1.5 Conclusion and Outlook
2. Migration and Gender: Researching Migration in National, Global, and Transnational Frameworks (Anna Amelina)
2.1 Gender and Social Inequality: The Challenges of Migration Research
2.2 Key Questions and Limitations of Assimilation Theories
2.3 The Neoclassical Approach and World-Systems Theory: Analyzing International Migration in a Globalized Context
2.4 The Transnational Perspective in Migration Research and Gender-Sensitive Inequality Analysis
2.5 The Interplay of Gender, Ethnicity/Race, and Class from a Transnational Perspective
2.6 Summary and Outlook
3. Doing Migration and Doing Gender: Intersectional Perspectives on Migration and Gender (Anna Amelina)
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Doing Migration: The Social Constructivist Perspective in Migration Research
3.3 Studies of Intersectionality: Analyzing the Interplay of Migration and Gender
3.4 Migration and Gender in the Focus of Intersectionality: The Current Research on Migration and Mobility in Europe
3.5 Conclusion and Outlook
4. Care: An Intersectional Analysis of Transnational Care Work and Transnational Families (Helma Lutz)
4.1 Care as (Un)paid Labor
4.2 Care as Gainful Employment
4.3 Global Care Chains: Transnational Motherhood and Care Circulation
4.4 Transnational Families between Stigmatization and Recognition
4.5 The Intersection of Regimes of Gender, Care/Welfare, and Migration
4.6 Conclusion: The Redistribution of Social Inequality
5. The Changing Face of Citizenship: From the National Model to the Transnational and Intersectional Approaches
5.1 Key Dimensions of Citizenship
5.2 Transnationally Oriented Citizenship Studies: Citizenship in the Process of Deterritorialization
5.3 Challenging "White Androcentrism": Feminist and Intersectional Approaches to Citizenship Research
5.4 "The Limits of Gendered Citizenship": The Intersectional Perspective in Citizenship Research
5.5 Conclusion
6. Teaching Intersections of Gender, Migration and Transnationality (Helma Lutz)
6.1 Cultural Representations and Signifying Practices
6.2. A Proposal for Gender-Sensitive Migration Research: Summary of Chapter 1
6.3 Deconstructing Classical Migration Research from the Perspectives of Gender and Transnational Studies: Summary of Chapter 2
6.4 Intersectional Tools for Transnational Migration Research: Summary of Chapter 3
6.5 Intersectional Analysis of Transnational Care Relations: Summary of Chapter 4
6.6. Citizenship Theories beyond the National Paradigm: Summary of Chapter 5
References
Anna Amelina is Professor of Intercultural Studies at the Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus–Senftenberg, Germany.
Helma Lutz is Professor of Gender Studies at the Goethe-University of Frankfurt, Germany.
A remarkable book which provides a comprehensive and conceptually
sophisticated analysis of the field of gender and migration studies
with a particular emphasis on a much needed intersectional
perspective. Both critical and engaging, it not only provides an
overview of debates in the field but also contributes theoretically
to the area and its development, as well as making a broader
contribution to the sociology of migration, to gender studies and
to intersectionality.
—Floya Anthias, Professor of Sociology and Social Justice
(Emeritus), University of Roehampton, LondonMaking sense of
transnational mobility and gender, this timely textbook breaks new
ground by pushing us to take a closer look at the interstices of
cross-border structures and practices in burgeoning fields such as
(post-)migration, care and citizenship studies. The magisterial
gender- and inequality-sensitive framework provided by the authors
successfully connects the various strands of existing research, and
thus opens a space for lively discussion between adherents and
skeptics of various approaches. —Thomas Faist, Professor of
Sociology of Transnationalization, Migration and Development,
Bielefeld UniversityUsing an intersectional lens to explore key
issues of migration as a fundamentally gendered process, this book
breaks new ground in the study of transnationalism, care, and
citizenship. A unique feature of the book is the final chapter on
teaching the intersections of gender, migration, and
transnationality through the imaginative use of film.—Russell King,
Professor of Geography, University of SussexGender, long a
neglected dimension of the migration experience, has been
increasingly discussed in the recent literature. Never, however,
had this resulted in such a clear and exhaustive overview. By
bringing together insights from theories of transnationalism,
intersectionality and gender relations, the authors make a major
contribution to the teaching and research agenda on gender and
migration.—Paolo Boccagni, Associate Professor, Department of
Sociology and Social Research, University of Trento
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