Existing research has tended to highlight the working lives, career trajectories and networking practices of skilled migrant men. In contrast, this article asserts the significance of domestic space in the constitution and narration of migrant masculinities, examining the role of domestic practices, objects, and relations. To do so, I explore the practices and narratives of British migrants in Dubai, drawing on ethnographic research, including interviews surrounding international relocation and domestic material culture, as well as participant-observation within homes. Migrants with a range of occupations, migration trajectories, residence biographies, and living arrangements are included in the discussion. Through the analysis it is demons...
This article examines young men's (aged 18-25 years) meanings of home and practices of homemaking, c...
Drawing on quantitative analysis of three data sets - the Worker Registration Scheme, the Labour For...
How do we make sense of home in the context of migration? Can we understand home as rooted in place?...
The impact of migration on gender identities, norms and conventions has been predominantly understoo...
With reference to British transnationalism in Dubai, this article examines the discourses surroundin...
In this chapter I examine domestic practices in migrant families through interviews with immigrant m...
In the literature on migration to the states of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), authors generall...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.This is a qualitative data co...
Although there is growing scholarship on marginalised migrants and racialised masculinities, studies...
Context Currently, many and diverse groups of migrating people are swept up in global movement and ...
The majority of research on migrant men is focused on critical analyses regarding the domestic spher...
Contemporary immigration from Pakistan to the UK often takes the form of marriage migration, as subs...
Recent academic arguments in transnational and mobility studies have emphasised fluid and flexible u...
This paper examines some of the emotions highlighted by interactions between British migrants and Gu...
Abstract: Although migrant masculinities exhibit diverse forms of solidarities in host countries, ex...
This article examines young men's (aged 18-25 years) meanings of home and practices of homemaking, c...
Drawing on quantitative analysis of three data sets - the Worker Registration Scheme, the Labour For...
How do we make sense of home in the context of migration? Can we understand home as rooted in place?...
The impact of migration on gender identities, norms and conventions has been predominantly understoo...
With reference to British transnationalism in Dubai, this article examines the discourses surroundin...
In this chapter I examine domestic practices in migrant families through interviews with immigrant m...
In the literature on migration to the states of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), authors generall...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.This is a qualitative data co...
Although there is growing scholarship on marginalised migrants and racialised masculinities, studies...
Context Currently, many and diverse groups of migrating people are swept up in global movement and ...
The majority of research on migrant men is focused on critical analyses regarding the domestic spher...
Contemporary immigration from Pakistan to the UK often takes the form of marriage migration, as subs...
Recent academic arguments in transnational and mobility studies have emphasised fluid and flexible u...
This paper examines some of the emotions highlighted by interactions between British migrants and Gu...
Abstract: Although migrant masculinities exhibit diverse forms of solidarities in host countries, ex...
This article examines young men's (aged 18-25 years) meanings of home and practices of homemaking, c...
Drawing on quantitative analysis of three data sets - the Worker Registration Scheme, the Labour For...
How do we make sense of home in the context of migration? Can we understand home as rooted in place?...