International Migration Review
Volume 38, Issue 3, 2004, Pages 970-1001
Migrant transnationalism and modes of transformation (Review)
Vertovec S.*
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a
University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 2JD, United Kingdom
Abstract
Much of the literature on migrant transnationalism focuses on the ways that specific sociocultural institutions have been modified in the course of being stretched across the globe. Yet migrant transnational practices are involved in more deep-seated patterns of change or structural transformation. Such modes of transformation concern: 1) an enhanced 'bifocality' of outlooks underpinning migrant lives lived here-and-there; such dual orientations have considerable influence on transnational family life and may continue to affect identities among subsequent post-migration generations; 2) heightened challenges to 'identities-borders-orders stemming from migrants' political affiliations in more than one nation-state; these particularly arise around questions of dual citizenship and nationality; and 3) potentially profound impacts on economic development by way of the sheer scale and evolving means of remittance sending; money transfer services, hometown associations and microfinance institutions represent three kinds of remittance-related organizations currently undergoing significant forms of adaptation with significant consequences for development. These modes of transformation, and the practices of migrant transnationalism surrounding them, both draw from and contribute to wider processes of globalization. © 2004 by the Center for Migration Studies of New York. All rights reserved.
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-10944225865&partnerID=40&md5=7d89189333a00d202c52ce8fe9b0e512
ISSN: 01979183
Cited by: 408
Original Language: English