"You Know, Abraham Was Really the First Immigrant": Religion and Transnational Migration
Author(s)
Levitt, Peggy
Abstract
The purpose of this article is to summarize what we know about the role that religion plays in transnational migration and to outline a strategy for further research in this area. While migration scholars now generally acknowledge the salience of migrants’ economic, social, and political transnational activities, we have largely overlooked the ways in which religious identities and practices also enable migrants to sustain memberships in multiple locations. The author’s goals in this article are threefold. First, to provide a brief overview of related bodies of work on global, diasporic, and immigrant religion and to differentiate them from studies of migrants’ transnational religious practices. Second, to selectively summarize what we have learned about the role of religion in transnational migration from prior research. Finally, to propose an approach to future research on these questions.