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This book engages with a critical perspective on gender equality
and quality of life. It provides a comprehensive overview of
theoretical and methodological frameworks for exploring both
concepts which is complemented by the analysis of gender equality
policies in Poland and Norway. With contributors from sociology to
history and health studies, it draws on a wide range of examples to
examine a multidimensional concept underpinning policy commitments
and actions in areas such as family, labour market, health,
reproductive rights or participation in political life. "This is
not only an expertly written and interesting book, but also a
particularly current one in the light of the Europe-wide
socio-political changes that affect both Poland and Norway." Prof.
Malgorzata Fuszara (University of Warsaw)
This book provides timely insights into the lives of Polish
migrants who have been settling in Norway with their partners and
children, especially over the last decade. It brings together
Polish and Norwegian scholars who shed light on the key areas of
migrant family practices in the transnational space. The
contributors critically assess social capital of those living
mobile lives, discuss the role of institutions, as well as engage
with the broad problematics of caring - both with regard to migrant
children raised in Norway, and the elderly kin members left behind
in Poland. Further, the authors tackle the question of the
possibilities and constrains of integration, pointing to several
areas of policy implications of transnationalism for both Poland
and Norway.
The volume offers an overview of research and debates concerning
new female migrants in European countries. Despite the effects of
globalisation and the Europeanisation both of national migration
and integration policies and of studies carried out by
transnational research projects, social, economic and political
conditions at a national level remain a powerful basis of academic
production. Varying conditions for migration and integration and
language and cultural specificities create differentiated research
and debates.
This book investigates transnational migration and mobility of
women from, and within, Central-Eastern European countries. It
looks at women's practices and experiences mostly in the service
sector where they are in demand as substitutes in stereotypically
"women's work." The book combines different perspectives including
sociological and anthropological studies, comparative policy
analysis, and historical and statistical evidence. It provides new
insights into current theoretical debates in migration and gender
studies.
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