A cosmopolitan environment offers challenges for cultural groups that seek to reproduce themselves in the next generation. British Pakistanis have not seen the kind of breakdown in marriage boundaries that characterizes other post-war migrants to Britain. The article examines how this pattern is linked to commitments to transnational marriage, which promise a source of future remittances to Pakistan. However, the need to maintain these links has exaggerated the importance of religious and moral display for British Pakistanis, and these have wider effects in the policing of social contact with outsiders and the negative portrayal of the sexual morality of non-Pakistanis
Contemporary immigration from Pakistan to the UK often takes the form of marriage migration, as subs...
This article documents recent developments in British legal policy towards polygamy. The issue of po...
Following Edward Said’s theorization of filiation and affiliation, this paper maps transformative it...
A cosmopolitan environment offers challenges for cultural groups that seek to reproduce themselves i...
Transnational marriage has been at the centre of controversies around migration control and multicul...
In the year 2000, over ten thousand Pakistani nationals obtained entry clearance to join spouses in...
NoThis article focuses on Pakistani Muslim women across generations: pioneer migrants who arrived in...
This paper examines the ongoing significance of Pakistani heritage in the lives of young British Pak...
This thesis explores the meaning and experience of local and transnational kin connections for Pakis...
This article draws on detailed case studies of Pakistani-origin individuals in the UK to explore the...
This paper traces the ways in which British born Muslim women self-identify with Britain and South A...
This article brings together a range of data sources to chart cohort change in the human capital cha...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>Data from the 2001 census suggest that rates of sing...
The paper contains an exploration of the reasons why rules of clan exogamy followed by Punjabi Hindu...
Based on the author's long standing ethnographic experience of developments with Punjabi ethnic colo...
Contemporary immigration from Pakistan to the UK often takes the form of marriage migration, as subs...
This article documents recent developments in British legal policy towards polygamy. The issue of po...
Following Edward Said’s theorization of filiation and affiliation, this paper maps transformative it...
A cosmopolitan environment offers challenges for cultural groups that seek to reproduce themselves i...
Transnational marriage has been at the centre of controversies around migration control and multicul...
In the year 2000, over ten thousand Pakistani nationals obtained entry clearance to join spouses in...
NoThis article focuses on Pakistani Muslim women across generations: pioneer migrants who arrived in...
This paper examines the ongoing significance of Pakistani heritage in the lives of young British Pak...
This thesis explores the meaning and experience of local and transnational kin connections for Pakis...
This article draws on detailed case studies of Pakistani-origin individuals in the UK to explore the...
This paper traces the ways in which British born Muslim women self-identify with Britain and South A...
This article brings together a range of data sources to chart cohort change in the human capital cha...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>Data from the 2001 census suggest that rates of sing...
The paper contains an exploration of the reasons why rules of clan exogamy followed by Punjabi Hindu...
Based on the author's long standing ethnographic experience of developments with Punjabi ethnic colo...
Contemporary immigration from Pakistan to the UK often takes the form of marriage migration, as subs...
This article documents recent developments in British legal policy towards polygamy. The issue of po...
Following Edward Said’s theorization of filiation and affiliation, this paper maps transformative it...