The popularity of transnational marriages that in most cases involve first cousins or other kin distinguishes Pakistanis from other British South Asian groups. In this article we explain the popularity of such marriages. We seek to complement accounts that stress kinship obligations and socio-economic strategy by showing that transnational marriages are also motivated by the emotional ties of kinship. Central to this analysis is a focus on the Urdu/Panjabi concept of rishta, which conveys ideas about a ‘good’ match and about emotional connections between people. Our attention to emotional discourse between siblings, between parents and children and between prospective spouses in the context of marriage arrangements augments the understandin...
This study applies exchange theory to transnational marriages between descendants of migrants to Eur...
Resilience is the ability and knowledge of a person on what he/she can do when he/ she falls and lea...
Pakistani politics are characterised by strong corporate social links through kinship and caste that...
In the year 2000, over ten thousand Pakistani nationals obtained entry clearance to join spouses in...
Based on the author's long standing ethnographic experience of developments with Punjabi ethnic colo...
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...
The main research objective of this thesis examines how individual, self-identifying British Pakista...
‘Marrying back home’ is one of the transnational practices demonstrated by Pakistani diaspora to mai...
Pakistani Punjabi landlords use marriage both strategically as well as affectively. That is to say, ...
Funding: European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innova...
In this article, based on ongoing research carried out in Bangladesh since the mid-1980s and field-w...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>This data collection consists of semi-structured int...
Transnational arranged marriages among Muslim temporary labour migrants’ children have been problema...
A cosmopolitan environment offers challenges for cultural groups that seek to reproduce themselves i...
This study applies exchange theory to transnational marriages between descendants of migrants to Eur...
Resilience is the ability and knowledge of a person on what he/she can do when he/ she falls and lea...
Pakistani politics are characterised by strong corporate social links through kinship and caste that...
In the year 2000, over ten thousand Pakistani nationals obtained entry clearance to join spouses in...
Based on the author's long standing ethnographic experience of developments with Punjabi ethnic colo...
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...
The main research objective of this thesis examines how individual, self-identifying British Pakista...
‘Marrying back home’ is one of the transnational practices demonstrated by Pakistani diaspora to mai...
Pakistani Punjabi landlords use marriage both strategically as well as affectively. That is to say, ...
Funding: European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innova...
In this article, based on ongoing research carried out in Bangladesh since the mid-1980s and field-w...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>This data collection consists of semi-structured int...
Transnational arranged marriages among Muslim temporary labour migrants’ children have been problema...
A cosmopolitan environment offers challenges for cultural groups that seek to reproduce themselves i...
This study applies exchange theory to transnational marriages between descendants of migrants to Eur...
Resilience is the ability and knowledge of a person on what he/she can do when he/ she falls and lea...
Pakistani politics are characterised by strong corporate social links through kinship and caste that...