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Home, Work and Community: Skilled International Migration and Expatriate Women in Singapore

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Home, Work and Community: Skilled International Migration and Expatriate Women in Singapore
Author(s)Yeoh, Brenda S. A.; Khoo, Louisa-May
AbstractWhile skilled labour migration across international borders is a phenomenon of increasing significance in the age of globalization and an important component in the production of global cities, it has not been given sufficient attention in traditional migration analyses. Recent research has focused on institutional mechanisms regulating the patterns of skill transfer rather than the individual experience of being part of the international labour circuit. Women, in particular, have usually been relegated to the role of “trailing spouses” and are generally invisible in the migration process. Using a questionnaire survey and in-depth interviews, this article attempts to reinstate the importance of women’s roles by portraying them as active agents who adopt a range of strategies in negotiating the move and coming to terms with the transformations wrought by the move in the domains of home, work and community. It argues that skilled labour migration is a strongly gendered process, producing different sets of experiences for the men and women involved in it. While international circulation often represents “career moves” for expatriate men, their spouses often experience a devalorization of their productive functions and a relegation to the domestic sphere. As an adaptive strategy, expatriate women often turn to the social and community sphere to reach for grounding in their lives. The article also points to the diversity of “expatriate experiences”: while “western” expatriates tend to recreate a more exclusive world by drawing on strong institutional support, “Asian” expatriates find that they have to navigate much finer social and cultural divides between themselves and the host society.
IssueNo2
Pages159-186
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceInternational Migration
VolumeNo36
PubDateJune 1998
ISBN_ISSN0020-7985
Browse Path(s)History
—-World/Global History
——–Migration
————Migration Patterns

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