Gender and Insecurity: Migrant Women in Europe

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Jane Freedman
Ashgate, 2003 - 199 ページ
Since the 1960s a number of major developments in global migration patterns have placed the phenomenon at the heart of global politics. First, the scale of movements has increased exponentially. Secondly, there has been an enormous increase in the diversity of international population movement. Thirdly, and perhaps inevitably, there has been a dramatic increase in the number of global institutions involved in shaping the level and patterning of international migration. countries and cities beyond all recognition. Simultaneously, the increase in global migration has also given rise to paranoia and xenophobia. Predicated on the European Union, this project emerges out of a serious concern for the plight of women without states and those who fall victim to the states that are supposed to offer them some basic protection. This book addresses these various forms of insecurity and details ways in which they might be addressed. Further, it looks at the ways in which immigrant women have themselves tried to fight against these insecurities through their own political mobilization.

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