Item does not contain fulltextThis article explores Afghan return migrants' strategies and constraints to identify with the different spaces of belonging they encountered, through their expressions and practices of marriage. We take an in-depth approach to the life histories of 35 voluntary and involuntary Afghan returnees from European countries. We find that in narrating and performing different marriage practices, some Afghan return migrants construct fixed boundaries between different spaces of belonging, while others try to construct these boundaries as permeable and hybrid. Gender and mobility strongly define the way in which return migrants narrate and perform marriage as a cultural practice that determines who belongs, who wants to ...
This thesis is about the lives and civic engagements of Afghans in Germany and the UK. It shows how ...
We generally associate civil wars with flows of refugees. We tend to give much less consideration to...
This article offers a single case study of everyday suffering (‘khapgan’—Pakhto; ‘feeling down’) exp...
This article explores Afghan return migrants' strategies and constraints to identify with the differ...
This article examines agency unfolding in the relationships that Afghan migrants and return migrants...
Contains fulltext : 162096.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Return migratio...
Return migration after conflict is the result of a complex decision-making process. However, our un...
In this article I approach the relationship between marriage and migration from the perspective of t...
This article is about resettled Afghan Hazaras in Australia, many of whom are currently undergoing a...
This paper explores a new avenue of the hierarchisation of mobility amongst voluntary and involuntar...
This paper explores a new avenue of the hierarchisation of mobility amongst voluntary and involuntar...
This article examines the “repertories” of family life of men of Afghan background in Odessa, Ukrain...
Most research on labour migration from Central Asia has explored the motivations and strategies of t...
This article examines the “repertories” of family life of men of Afghan background in Odessa, Ukrain...
This article is about resettled Afghan Hazaras in Australia, many of whom are currently undergoing a...
This thesis is about the lives and civic engagements of Afghans in Germany and the UK. It shows how ...
We generally associate civil wars with flows of refugees. We tend to give much less consideration to...
This article offers a single case study of everyday suffering (‘khapgan’—Pakhto; ‘feeling down’) exp...
This article explores Afghan return migrants' strategies and constraints to identify with the differ...
This article examines agency unfolding in the relationships that Afghan migrants and return migrants...
Contains fulltext : 162096.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Return migratio...
Return migration after conflict is the result of a complex decision-making process. However, our un...
In this article I approach the relationship between marriage and migration from the perspective of t...
This article is about resettled Afghan Hazaras in Australia, many of whom are currently undergoing a...
This paper explores a new avenue of the hierarchisation of mobility amongst voluntary and involuntar...
This paper explores a new avenue of the hierarchisation of mobility amongst voluntary and involuntar...
This article examines the “repertories” of family life of men of Afghan background in Odessa, Ukrain...
Most research on labour migration from Central Asia has explored the motivations and strategies of t...
This article examines the “repertories” of family life of men of Afghan background in Odessa, Ukrain...
This article is about resettled Afghan Hazaras in Australia, many of whom are currently undergoing a...
This thesis is about the lives and civic engagements of Afghans in Germany and the UK. It shows how ...
We generally associate civil wars with flows of refugees. We tend to give much less consideration to...
This article offers a single case study of everyday suffering (‘khapgan’—Pakhto; ‘feeling down’) exp...