Gendered Experiences of Migration: Seeking Education and Employment in an Urbanizing World
A special issue of Societies (ISSN 2075-4698).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 January 2023) | Viewed by 2533
Special Issue Editor
Interests: urban-rural intersections; gender and class identities; displacements and mobilities; rural livelihoods; industrial employment
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The growth of urban populations across the world is being driven to a large extent by international and internal migrations, so that the experiences of new migrants become central to understanding the changing nature of contemporary cities. These experiences are likely to be shaped by gender in significant ways – for instance, in terms of who is able to become a migrant, as well as the social and economic roles available for new migrants in urban destinations. While gender and migration has often been studied in terms of marriage and family, there is also a need to link it to education and employment opportunities. From an economic perspective, skills associated with migrant populations have either placed them in positions of affluence or relegated them to informal and precarious work. Whether opportunities for education and employment differ by gender thus becomes important in understanding how gender intersects with class formations. From a social perspective, the expression of ethnic and national identities now encompasses both physical and virtual spaces. Gender differentiated participation in these various spaces is likely to be another important aspect of the reconstruction of ethnic identity in urban destinations. There is also a political aspect to socioeconomic experiences, as immigration policies may favor specific places and skills which in turn may gender migration flows. Overall, there is a need to extend existing approaches to gender and migration by (i) placing migrants at the heart of urbanization, (ii) viewing urban identity formations as cross-cultural encounters, and (iii) analyzing how intersections of gender and migration reveal both barriers to migration and collective struggles to overcome these barriers.
This Special Issue invites research that makes new contributions to understandings of gender and migration and welcomes qualitative and quantitative studies from across the Global South and North. It especially seeks articles that contrast the experiences of women and men, or connect migration experiences across origins and destinations.
Dr. Pratyusha Basu
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- rural to urban migration
- international migration
- internal migration
- reasons for migration
- migration and social media making place for new ethic identities
- gender inequalities and migration
- immigration policies and gender
- gender and migration
- internal migration
- immigration policies
- employment led migration
- education led migration
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