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The South Asia to Gulf Migration Governance Complex
作者
:
出版日期
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2022/05/30
閱讀格式
:
EPUB
ISBN
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9781529221503
EPDF and EPUB available Open Access under CC-BY-NC-ND licence. The Gulf is a major global destination for migrant workers, with a majority of these workers coming from South Asia. In this book, a team of international contributors examine the often-overlooked complex governance of this migration corridor. Going beyond state-centric analysis, the contributors present a multi-layered account of the ‘migration governance complex.’ They offer insights not only into the actors involved in the different components of migration governance, but also into the varying ways of interpreting and explaining the meaning and value of these interactions. Together, they enable readers to better understand migration in this important region, while also providing a model for analyzing global migration governance in practice in different parts of the world.
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgements
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PART I Introduction
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1 Mapping and Theorizing Migration Governance: Insights from the South-to-West Asian Migration Corridor
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Introducing the migration governance complex in the South Asia to Gulf corridor
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Formal institutions and global migration governance
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Unpacking (global) migration governance through the South Asia to Gulf migration corridor
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Further observations from this volume
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Notes
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References
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PART II Levels and Forms of Migration Governance
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2 Gendered Mobility and Multi-Scalar Governance Models: Exploring the Case of Nurse Migration from India to the Gulf
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Introduction
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Background: nurses and international migration
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Extension of Emigration Clearance Required status to nurse migrants: impacts and implications
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Conclusion: a gendered form of the migration governance complex?
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References
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3 Understanding Irregularity in Legal Frameworks of National, Bilateral, Regional, and Global Migration Governance: The Nepal to Gulf Migration Corridor
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Introduction
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Irregular migrant workers in the context of Nepal
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Concerns and challenges of irregular Nepali migrants in the Gulf
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International legal standards governing the rights and protection of irregular migrant workers
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Remedies for better migration governance vis-à-vis irregular migrant workers from Nepal
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Mitigating measures to be adopted by the destination countries
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Conclusion
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Notes
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References
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4 State and Non-State Actors in Subnational Migration Governance from Andhra Pradesh and Kerala to the Gulf: A Comparative Study
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Introduction
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Migration governance – beyond national governments
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Migration governance in Kerala
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Migration governance in Andhra Pradesh
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Comparing migration governance of two states in India
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Notes
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References
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PART III Private Authorities and Transnational Actors
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5 Two Bad Places at Once: Pakistani Labour Migrants and the Transnational Recruitment Industry to the Gulf
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Introduction
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Subnational push factors
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Methodology
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Interview findings
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Conclusion
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Notes
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References
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6 “We Sent Our Sons across the Seven Rivers”: Tracing the Migratory Network and the Risky Migration of Bangladeshi Fishermen to Oman
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Introduction
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Leaving Hatiya: a risky gamble
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“Kulu Oman haram” (Everything is bad in Oman)
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A migration without protection: from precarity at home to precarity abroad
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Conclusion
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Notes
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References
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PART IV Contestation and Absences in Migration Governance
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7 Contested Governance and Sovereignty in the Kerala–Dubai Migration Corridor
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Introduction
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The State-to-Emirate migratory corridor
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Governing recruitment in the Kerala–Dubai corridor
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A shared e-Migrate system
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Conclusion
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Notes
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References
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8 Kafala and Social Reproduction: Migration Governance Regimes and Labour Relations in the Gulf
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Introduction
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Labour governance in the GCC and how it is lived
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Domestic labour: what is it exactly?
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Social reproduction
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Conclusion: governance and organization
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Notes
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References
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9 Invisiblized Migration, Unaccounted Work: The Governance of Women’s Migration for Paid Domestic Work from Nepal and Sri Lanka to the Gulf
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Introduction
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Contextualizing women’s migration for paid domestic work
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What the data reveals and conceals
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Gender discriminatory policies and the guise of protectionism
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Concluding thoughts on recognizing domestic workers’ contribution to social reproduction at source and destination countries
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Notes
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References
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PART V Conclusion
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10 Bottom-up Politics of Labour Migration: Perspectives from the South-to-West Asia Corridor for a More Inclusive Governance
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Introduction
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New potential trajectories of resistance
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Overcoming national policies and governance gaps
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Reforming the recruitment process: perils and potential
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Exercising agency, escaping vulnerability, containing arbitrary practices
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References
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- Index
- 出版地 : 英國
- 語言 : 英文
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