This thesis explores the transformative effects of immigration from the 1960s through the 2010s among women from Taiwan living in the County of Santa Clara. The study focused on three substantive areas: (1) early life experiences and factors leading to immigration; (2) shifts in social identities after leaving Taiwan (e.g., political, national, and ethnic self-concepts in various contexts); and (3) practices of child-rearing. Several methodological tools were employed during the data collection phase of the research process, including interviews, surveys, and participant observations. The findings of this study suggested a dynamic process of change in which informants adapted to, were affected by, and influenced their new milieus to vary...
Southeast Asian and Chinese women have been marrying Taiwanese men since the 1980s. Nonetheless, cr...
Thesis (Ph.D.) - Indiana University, School of Education, 2015This dissertation explores the identif...
Through an examination of middle-class Taiwanese immigrants\u27 ethno-gender identities, this study ...
There is a growing emphasis on students’ cultural experiences on campus. As such, the purpose of th...
In 2010, there were over 400,000 immigrants residing in Taiwan, many of them women from Mainland Chi...
In the last two decades, transnational marriages have been growing in Taiwan, Republic of China (R.O...
In the last two decades, transnational marriages have been growing in Taiwan, Republic of China (R.O...
In the last two decades, transnational marriages have been growing in Taiwan, Republic of China (R.O...
In the last two decades, transnational marriages have been growing in Taiwan, Republic of China (R.O...
This dissertation analyzes the identity formation and transformation of Taiwanese migrants to China ...
This dissertation is an ethnographic exploration of how Southeast Asian immigrant women in Taiwan ar...
[[abstract]]Abstract The study was aimed at probing the relevant influence of different lifestyle...
This dissertation is an ethnographic exploration of how Southeast Asian immigrant women in Taiwan ar...
Research on Taiwanese migrants has primarily been conducted in Australia, New Zealand, the United S...
In many parts of the world, immigration typically involves families emigrating from one country to a...
Southeast Asian and Chinese women have been marrying Taiwanese men since the 1980s. Nonetheless, cr...
Thesis (Ph.D.) - Indiana University, School of Education, 2015This dissertation explores the identif...
Through an examination of middle-class Taiwanese immigrants\u27 ethno-gender identities, this study ...
There is a growing emphasis on students’ cultural experiences on campus. As such, the purpose of th...
In 2010, there were over 400,000 immigrants residing in Taiwan, many of them women from Mainland Chi...
In the last two decades, transnational marriages have been growing in Taiwan, Republic of China (R.O...
In the last two decades, transnational marriages have been growing in Taiwan, Republic of China (R.O...
In the last two decades, transnational marriages have been growing in Taiwan, Republic of China (R.O...
In the last two decades, transnational marriages have been growing in Taiwan, Republic of China (R.O...
This dissertation analyzes the identity formation and transformation of Taiwanese migrants to China ...
This dissertation is an ethnographic exploration of how Southeast Asian immigrant women in Taiwan ar...
[[abstract]]Abstract The study was aimed at probing the relevant influence of different lifestyle...
This dissertation is an ethnographic exploration of how Southeast Asian immigrant women in Taiwan ar...
Research on Taiwanese migrants has primarily been conducted in Australia, New Zealand, the United S...
In many parts of the world, immigration typically involves families emigrating from one country to a...
Southeast Asian and Chinese women have been marrying Taiwanese men since the 1980s. Nonetheless, cr...
Thesis (Ph.D.) - Indiana University, School of Education, 2015This dissertation explores the identif...
Through an examination of middle-class Taiwanese immigrants\u27 ethno-gender identities, this study ...