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Class Formations and Inequality Structures in Contemporary African Migration - Evidence from Ghana (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,993
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Class Formations and Inequality Structures in Contemporary African Migration - Evidence from Ghana (Hardcover)
Series: African Migration and Diaspora Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This book examines the influences of social class and inequality
structures on migration in Africa using information from Ghana. As
the country achieves moderate to significant economic gains driven
(in part) by the country's diaspora communities, the desire to
migrate has intensified. Migration is now synonymous with social
mobility and self-improvement. It has been found that existing
class and status inequalities are analytically inseparable from the
social and cultural processes underpinning the motivations behind
Ghanaian migration. Migrant class and socioeconomic attributes are
closely intertwined, reinforcing and operating at every level of
the migration decision-making to influence the motivation to
migrate, the type and form of migration, the direction of the
migration, its timing, and ultimately the outcomes and expectations
that migrants associate with their decision to migrate. From a
historical and contemporary perspective, this book argues that
power and class-based structural relationships are significant
components in understanding how migratory diasporas shape and are
shaped in turn by social class and inequality. The social class
identities that Ghanaian immigrants manifest in the United States
are often based on immigrant formulations and importation of class
dynamics from the home country. These identities are then
transformed in the countries of destination and replayed or relived
back home, thereby creating multiple class identities that are
powerful forces in inducing social changes. In essence, migrant
social class attributes formed before and post-migration is
significant because it holds the possibilities of transforming the
social structures of migrant-sending countries. As migrants return
home and seek reintegration into the body polity of the home
society, conflicts emanating from changes in their class dynamics
may hinder or promote sociocultural and economic development.
Hence, the imperative of the central government is to understand
and incorporate into national development planning the social class
characteristics of its citizens who are leaving, as well as those
who are returning.
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