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Place, National Identity and Post-Socialist Transformations: An Introduction

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Place, National Identity and Post-Socialist Transformations: An Introduction
Author(s)Young, Craig; Light, Duncan
AbstractThis article discusses a widespread pattern of migratory moves that is often overlooked in contemporary research on transnational migration. Transnational theory has successfully highlighted the significance of migrants’ attachments to people and places transcending the confines of nation-states. By emphasizing, a priori, the national, this theory tends to overlook the full complexity and meaning of migrants’ extra-local socio-cultural relations. Through an ethnographic study of dispersed family networks of Caribbean origin, I explore the wide range of migration practices in which differing actors engage as migrants move between places.
IssueNo8
Pages941-955
ArticleAccess to Article
SourcePolitical Geography
VolumeNo20
PubDateNovember 2001
ISBN_ISSN0962-6298

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