This chapter focuses on the concept of home (and its construction as a social as well as a subjective process) in relation to the migrant experience and the construction of multi-layered belongings. In this paper I argue that in the context of transnational migration, the concept of home focuses on its emotional perspective rather than its territorial connection, because it is constituted as a process of change and of searching related to the construction of multiple and extraterritorial ways of belonging (Brun & Fábos 2015; Korac 2009). Furthermore, I aim at challenging the notions of home as static and territorially bounded arguing that for migrants home is something highly portable, flexible, multiple, ambiguous and emotionally construct...
Examining how migration has been theorized and using empirical examples to explore hot topics, this ...
Home has been used in social sciences as a description, a metaphor and, more recently, as an emergen...
This thesis explores legal/documented immigrants in the United States, and how they\ud perceive ‘hom...
This chapter explores the dialectic meaning of ‘home’, and movement away from home. Movement away fr...
This paper offers theoretically informed empirical insights into migrant children’s experiences of m...
The word “home” can refer to a house, a family, a country, or even to a feeling of safety and comfor...
How might multiple attachments or belongings to place coexist or be fostered in these times (of terr...
markdownabstractIn this article I would like to present two conceptions of home in relation to peopl...
The study of home has historically been approached by numerous academic disciplines within the socia...
This chapter analyzes the ways in which migrants maintain, redefine and reinforce their conceptions ...
This chapter offers an account of a critical and comparative overview of bodies of international lit...
In the context of increased diversity, mobility and migration, as people change residence and break ...
This article examines the relationship between migration and identity by complicating our notion of ...
Navigating the multifaceted and temporal transnationalism experience is a daily element of life for ...
Recent academic arguments in transnational and mobility studies have emphasised fluid and flexible u...
Examining how migration has been theorized and using empirical examples to explore hot topics, this ...
Home has been used in social sciences as a description, a metaphor and, more recently, as an emergen...
This thesis explores legal/documented immigrants in the United States, and how they\ud perceive ‘hom...
This chapter explores the dialectic meaning of ‘home’, and movement away from home. Movement away fr...
This paper offers theoretically informed empirical insights into migrant children’s experiences of m...
The word “home” can refer to a house, a family, a country, or even to a feeling of safety and comfor...
How might multiple attachments or belongings to place coexist or be fostered in these times (of terr...
markdownabstractIn this article I would like to present two conceptions of home in relation to peopl...
The study of home has historically been approached by numerous academic disciplines within the socia...
This chapter analyzes the ways in which migrants maintain, redefine and reinforce their conceptions ...
This chapter offers an account of a critical and comparative overview of bodies of international lit...
In the context of increased diversity, mobility and migration, as people change residence and break ...
This article examines the relationship between migration and identity by complicating our notion of ...
Navigating the multifaceted and temporal transnationalism experience is a daily element of life for ...
Recent academic arguments in transnational and mobility studies have emphasised fluid and flexible u...
Examining how migration has been theorized and using empirical examples to explore hot topics, this ...
Home has been used in social sciences as a description, a metaphor and, more recently, as an emergen...
This thesis explores legal/documented immigrants in the United States, and how they\ud perceive ‘hom...