Women's Studies International Forum
Volume 27, Issue 4, 2004, Pages 335-349

Childbearing against the state? Asylum seeker women in the Irish republic (Article)

Luibhéid E.*
  • a Department of Ethnic Studies, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH 43403, United States

Abstract

Challenging standard accounts of globalization that ignore sexuality, race and gender as structuring variables, this article examines how childbearing discourses and practices have provided a means to redraw racial and national boundaries that have become destabilized in the contemporary era. Focusing on the Irish Republic, I show that, historically, women were annexed to postcolonial nationalism through their role as child bearers, understood in racial and national terms, and institutionalized in social policy and law. Today, in the context of accelerated globalization, the Irish government has required new strategies to construct the nation as a sovereign space. Discourses and practices targeting childbearing asylum seeker women have provided the government with a means to reconstitute the Republic as a sovereign space with a legitimate national government-while also generating new modes of racialization and racial hierarchies within Ireland. © 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

World Eurasia nationalism Western Europe childbearing Europe globalization Eastern Hemisphere asylum seeker womens status Ireland immigrant population

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-10844241946&doi=10.1016%2fj.wsif.2004.10.004&partnerID=40&md5=98f1d7e1fd8d88ab320d53c6015d956e

DOI: 10.1016/j.wsif.2004.10.004
ISSN: 02775395
Cited by: 49
Original Language: English