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This collection explores mobile childhoods: from Latvia and Estonia
to Finland; from Latvia to the United Kingdom; from Russia to
Finland; and cyclical mobility by the Roma between Romania and
Finland. The chapters examine how east-to-north European family
mobility brings out different kinds of multilocal childhoods. The
children experience unequal starting points and further twists
throughout their childhood and within their family lives. Through
the innovative use of ethnographic and participatory methods, the
contributors demonstrate how diverse migrant children's everyday
lives are, and how children themselves as well as their translocal
families actively pursue better lives. The topics include naming
and food practices, travel, schooling, summer holidays, economic
and other inequalities, and the importance of age in understanding
children's lives. Translocal Childhoods and Family Mobility in East
and North Europe will be of interest to students and scholars
across a range of disciplines, including sociology, anthropology
and human geography.
This book explores how the real conditions and subjective
conceptions of ageing and well-being are transformed when people
move from one country to another. Focusing on ageing female
migrants from Latvia in the UK and other European countries, this
book is based on fifty life-history interviews with women aged
40s-60s. Empirical chapters concentrate on functional well-being in
migration, which includes access to the economic citizenship of
work, income, pensions, and accommodation, and on psychosocial
well-being, and explores Latvian women's experiences of intimate
citizenship in migration. In addition, the authors' research
challenges the trope of vulnerability which generally surrounds the
framing of older migrants' lives. The study's findings offer
policy-makers insights into the realities of ageing working
migrants and advocates for a more inclusive transnational
citizenship, better working conditions, and ongoing care
arrangements for older migrants post-retirement, either abroad or
back home.
London has long been a magnet for migrants, millions of whom have
been attracted by its economic, educational and cultural roles as a
truly global city. This book examines recent European migration to
the London region through the narrated experiences of a large
number of younger migrants from 'old' and 'new' EU member states,
of varying educational and skill backgrounds. The research opens
multiple windows into the lives of young EU migrants from six
different countries before and after the 2016 Referendum on
'Brexit'. A key concept which lies at the core of the analysis is
the interrelationship between geographical mobility and the youth
transition to adulthood. Among the dimensions documented are study
and employment trajectories, housing and social inclusion, identity
and belonging, and transnational ties. By paying attention to young
people's own accounts of their mobile lives, the research pushes
the boundaries of traditional understandings of youth transitions
and life paths. As an indispensable account of young EU migrants
during the Brexit process, the book will appeal to undergraduate
and postgraduate students across the social sciences, especially
those interested in migration, youth studies and European studies,
as well as researchers and policy-makers.
This collection explores mobile childhoods: from Latvia and Estonia
to Finland; from Latvia to the United Kingdom; from Russia to
Finland; and cyclical mobility by the Roma between Romania and
Finland. The chapters examine how east-to-north European family
mobility brings out different kinds of multilocal childhoods. The
children experience unequal starting points and further twists
throughout their childhood and within their family lives. Through
the innovative use of ethnographic and participatory methods, the
contributors demonstrate how diverse migrant children's everyday
lives are, and how children themselves as well as their translocal
families actively pursue better lives. The topics include naming
and food practices, travel, schooling, summer holidays, economic
and other inequalities, and the importance of age in understanding
children's lives. Translocal Childhoods and Family Mobility in East
and North Europe will be of interest to students and scholars
across a range of disciplines, including sociology, anthropology
and human geography.
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