توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Return Migration in Later Life: International Perspectives
نام کتاب : Return Migration in Later Life: International Perspectives
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : مهاجرت بازگشتی در زندگی بعدی: دیدگاه های بین المللی
سری :
نویسندگان : John Percival (editor)
ناشر : Policy Press
سال نشر : 2013
تعداد صفحات : 274
ISBN (شابک) : 9781447301233
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 5 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Return migration in later life\nContents\nList of tables and figures\n Tables\n Figure\nNotes on contributors\nAcknowledgements\n1. Charting the waters: return migration in later life\n Introduction\n Migration patterns and accounting for numbers returning\n Identity, place and attachment\n Lifecourse perspectives on migration\n Family ties and obligations\n Health and welfare services\n2. Older immigrants leaving Sweden\n Introduction\n Data and definitions\n Analysis\n Conclusions\n3. Place and residence attachments in Canada’s older population\n Introduction\n Background: return and onward migration among the older population\n Data and methods\n Propensities and patterns\n Conclusions\n4. Ageing immigrants and the question of return: new answers to an old dilemma?\n Introduction\n Empirical testing of both perspectives\n Three possible options\n Criteria influencing intentions with respect to the place of residence\n Health criteria\n Concluding remarks\n5. Caribbean return migration in later life: family issues and transnational experiences as influential pre-retirement factors\n Introduction\n Caribbean return migration in later life: conceptual frames\n Caribbean conceptual frames\n Supportive and qualifying trinidadian ‘narratives’: variety reigns\n Return migrants’ own ‘migration-stories’ on later-life\n decision making\n Family obligations and family love\n Flexible strategies: transnational ‘va-et-vient’: ‘coming and going’ in later life\n Conclusions\n6. ‘We belong to the land’: British immigrants in Australia contemplating or realising their return ‘home’ in later life\n Introduction\n Home(s) and ‘that magnet in the beak thing’\n ‘Two lives in a parallel universe’\n ‘Family connections definitely play a big part’\n Personal priorities as older people\n Resource and relocation issues\n Future strategies\n Concluding remarks\n7. Diasporic returns to the city: Anglo-Indian and Jewish visits to Calcutta in later life\n The city of birth as a focus of return\n Anglo-Indian and Jewish Calcutta\n Cities, diasporas and returns\n Diasporic methodologies\n Urban returns\n City and community\n Conclusions\n8. Returning to ‘roots’: Estonian-Australian child migrants visiting the homeland\n Introduction\n The history\n The research\n ‘Like touching with your roots’\n ‘A very moving experience’\n ‘My roots are there’\n ‘It’s like I’ve got two homes’\n Conclusion\n9. Ageing in the ancestral homeland: ethno-biographical reflections on return migration in later life\n Introduction: researching age and migration in the Greek diaspora in Denmark\n Portraying Greek-Danish diasporic, emotional and ageing lives\n The enigma of homecoming: cultural myth and labyrinth in the homeland\n Conclusion: reflections on ageing, home and belonging\n10. ‘The past is a foreign country’: vulnerability to mental illness among return migrants\n Introduction\n The mental health of migrant communities\n The case of Irish migration and mental illness\n Identity and strategies of belonging\n Cultural capital\n Proximity and unplanned migration\n Going back home, reintegration, and its challenges\n Acculturation and reintegration\n Conclusion\n11. The blues of the ageing retornados: narratives on the return to Chile\n Introduction\n Context: the Chilean diaspora in Sweden and the return to Chile\n Narratives of return\n Conclusion\n12. Concluding reflections\nIndex