International migration research increasingly addresses the complex mobility that occurs in transnational contexts. Authors who study ties between migrants and their parents often focus on money transfers and financial investments. However, exchanges within transnational families are broader and multifaceted, and include an important care dimension that is shaped by gendered and cultural social codes. Studies show that women are often engaged in caring for their older parents even from a great distance. They develop strategies to attend to the well-being of their parents, including relocating them in order to bring them in closer proximity. While the economic aspects of care work within transnational family networks are well-researched, we ...
In this article, we introduce the key themes of our Special Issue on "Transnational care: families c...
In this article, we introduce the key themes of our Special Issue on “Transnational care: families c...
In this paper we argue that the current political context of restrictionist migration policies is dr...
Research into transnational families, migration and kin-work is principally divided into two main ar...
The defamilialization concept has been abundantly mobilized for the study of the gendered character ...
This article focuses on challenges of transnational aging and family care among „guest-workers‟ from...
Building on the Introduction, this chapter serves to locate the framework of care circulation in the...
This paper examines the consequences of migration on adult children’s capacity to care for their age...
Many Swiss households, dealing with care needs facing themselves in old age or older relatives, hire...
This chapter focuses on a relatively unexplored phenomenon concerning transnational families: family...
This article contributes to our understanding of transnational family relationships and the circulat...
As a result of the dominance of highly individualised, economistic and gendered analyses of migratio...
Migrants and their kin have been conceptualized as ‘transnational families’ in acknowledgement that ...
Care circulated within transnational family networks is a crucial element in transnational social pr...
Migrants and their kin have been conceptualized as ‘transnational families’ in acknowledgement that ...
In this article, we introduce the key themes of our Special Issue on "Transnational care: families c...
In this article, we introduce the key themes of our Special Issue on “Transnational care: families c...
In this paper we argue that the current political context of restrictionist migration policies is dr...
Research into transnational families, migration and kin-work is principally divided into two main ar...
The defamilialization concept has been abundantly mobilized for the study of the gendered character ...
This article focuses on challenges of transnational aging and family care among „guest-workers‟ from...
Building on the Introduction, this chapter serves to locate the framework of care circulation in the...
This paper examines the consequences of migration on adult children’s capacity to care for their age...
Many Swiss households, dealing with care needs facing themselves in old age or older relatives, hire...
This chapter focuses on a relatively unexplored phenomenon concerning transnational families: family...
This article contributes to our understanding of transnational family relationships and the circulat...
As a result of the dominance of highly individualised, economistic and gendered analyses of migratio...
Migrants and their kin have been conceptualized as ‘transnational families’ in acknowledgement that ...
Care circulated within transnational family networks is a crucial element in transnational social pr...
Migrants and their kin have been conceptualized as ‘transnational families’ in acknowledgement that ...
In this article, we introduce the key themes of our Special Issue on "Transnational care: families c...
In this article, we introduce the key themes of our Special Issue on “Transnational care: families c...
In this paper we argue that the current political context of restrictionist migration policies is dr...