Encouraging a conversation among scholars working with questions of transnationalism from the perspective of gender and race, this book explores the intersectionality between these two forms of oppression and their relation to transnational migration. How do sexism and racism articulate the experience of transnational migrants? What is the complex relationship between minorities and migrants in terms of gender and racial discrimination? What are the empirical and theoretical insights gained by an analysis that emphasizes the ‘intersectionality’ between gender and race? What empirical agenda can be developed out of these questions? Bringing a transnational lens to studies of migration from an intersectional perspective, the contributors focus on how power geometries, articulated through sexisms and racisms, are experienced in relation to a migration and/or minority context. They also challenge the rather fixed notions of what constitutes an intersectional approach to the study of oppressions in social interactions. Finally, the book’s inter- and multi-disciplinary range exhibits a variety of methodological ‘takes’ on the issue of transnational intersectionalities in migration and minority context. Taken together, the volume adds theoretical, empirical and historical insight to ethnic, racial, gender and migration studies.
This book was originally published as a special issue of Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power, v.22, 6 (december 2015)
págs. 1-18
The insertion of Roma in Sénart Project (2000–2007): a local minority-targeted affirmative action following in the footsteps of the French republican citizenship model
págs. 19-36
Control over female "Muslim" bodies: culture, politics and dress code laws in some Muslim and non-Muslim countries
págs. 37-52
Can stigma become a resource?: the mobilisation of aesthetic–corporal capital by female immigrant entrepreneurs from Brazil
págs. 53-71
"That unit of civilisation" and "the talent peculiar to women": British employers and their servants in the nineteenth-century Indian empire
págs. 72-87
págs. 88-104
Practices and rhetoric of migrants’ social exclusion in Italy: intermarriage, work and citizenship as devices for the production of social inequalities
págs. 105-122
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