Transnational flows of people, money and ideas are part and parcel
of globalization processes. Ties to the homeland have always been a
central focus of migration studies. How and why do the descendants
of migrants maintain their attachment to the ancestral homeland?
Tsypylma Darieva examines the changing nature of transnational
migratory flows and a new generation of diasporic youth among
global Armenians. Drawing on long-term observation and ethnographic
and interview data, she shows the social and political significance
that homeland pilgrimage and roots mobility acquire when the
mythical "homeland" becomes a real (local) place. How do these
flows shape transnational post-migrant life projects and visions of
the future between West and East?
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