This exploratory research critically examines identity negotiation and reconstruction among contemporary middle-class Asian Indian women as they transition from employment in India to a dependent H4 visa status in the United States. Most of these women have work experience prior to migration; however, moving to the U.S. on a dependent visa status restricts numerous activities that these women may engage in, including employment. This research evaluates whether and how Indian women incorporate their occupational roles in India to negotiate and reconstruct their identities in the United States. Through in-depth interviews with twenty Asian Indian women currently on a H4 visa and living in Houston, Texas, this research identifies the commonali...
This study probes lived role and identity experiences narrated by three cohorts of North Indian urba...
Guided by the principles of grounded theory, this qualitative study aimed to explore the Asian India...
This purpose of this study was to explore how second-generation (defined in this study as immigrants...
Traditional Indian cultural narratives are pervasive and serve to typify personal identity and exper...
This original and topical qualitative study explored the lived experiences of ten Indian women techn...
My dissertation research focuses on the construction of self and identity by Indian immigrant profes...
Thesis advisor: Usha Tummala-NarraDespite the Asian Indian community being one of the fastest growin...
Select women participated in this study of resettlement process and assimilation of immigrant Asian ...
The multiple constructions of identity that define an Indian woman - as a wife, a mother, a Goddess ...
The present study is an attempt at exploring meaning of migration in the lives of Asian Indian women...
The thesis examines the complex characteristics of agency and identity construction, focusing on Sou...
365 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2003.As a social history, this stu...
Ramya Vijaya will present perspectives from her recent book “Indian Immigrant Women and Work: The Am...
My Independent Study investigates how gender roles are maintained through the practices of stereotyp...
Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2008.The study details the transnational migrati...
This study probes lived role and identity experiences narrated by three cohorts of North Indian urba...
Guided by the principles of grounded theory, this qualitative study aimed to explore the Asian India...
This purpose of this study was to explore how second-generation (defined in this study as immigrants...
Traditional Indian cultural narratives are pervasive and serve to typify personal identity and exper...
This original and topical qualitative study explored the lived experiences of ten Indian women techn...
My dissertation research focuses on the construction of self and identity by Indian immigrant profes...
Thesis advisor: Usha Tummala-NarraDespite the Asian Indian community being one of the fastest growin...
Select women participated in this study of resettlement process and assimilation of immigrant Asian ...
The multiple constructions of identity that define an Indian woman - as a wife, a mother, a Goddess ...
The present study is an attempt at exploring meaning of migration in the lives of Asian Indian women...
The thesis examines the complex characteristics of agency and identity construction, focusing on Sou...
365 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2003.As a social history, this stu...
Ramya Vijaya will present perspectives from her recent book “Indian Immigrant Women and Work: The Am...
My Independent Study investigates how gender roles are maintained through the practices of stereotyp...
Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2008.The study details the transnational migrati...
This study probes lived role and identity experiences narrated by three cohorts of North Indian urba...
Guided by the principles of grounded theory, this qualitative study aimed to explore the Asian India...
This purpose of this study was to explore how second-generation (defined in this study as immigrants...