Fr. 78.20

Transnational Marriage and Partner Migration - Constellations of Security, Citizenship, and Rights

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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This multidisciplinary collection investigates how marriage and partner migration processes have become the object of state scrutiny for control and exclusion in several states around the world. Covering cases across several countries, contributors offer a compelling multidisciplinary perspective on the interplay between security, citizenship and rights as experienced by migrants, policymakers, and actors who negotiate encounters with the state.

List of contents










Series Foreword by Péter Berta
Introduction: Thinking in Constellations: Marriage and Partner Migration in Relation
to Security, Citizenship, and Rights
ANNE-MARIE D’AOUST

PART ONE
Policing Rights and Belonging: Histories and Legacies of Marriage Migration Management
1 The Odd Couple: Gender, Securitization, Europeanization, and Marriages of Convenience in Dutch Family Migration Policies (1930–2020)
BETTY DE HART
2 “A Necessary Evil”? The Problematization of Family Migration in French Parliamentary Debates on Family Migration, 1974–1993
SASKIA BONJOUR AND MASSILIA OURABAH
3 “All the Time, Hard Time”: Narrative, Agency, and History in the Sinse Taryeong of Korean Marriage Migrants
JI-YEON YUH

PART TWO
Intersectional Effects of Contemporary Marriage and Partner Migration Management: Stratification of Rights
4 What Do States Regulate When They Regulate Spousal Migration? A Study of France, the United Kingdom, the United States, and Denmark
HELENA WRAY
5 “I’m Not a Bad Guy, I Swear”: Analyzing Emotion Work and Negotiations of Criminality and Masculinity in Vietnamese-Canadian Men’s Participation in “Fake Wedding” Arrangements
GRACE K. TRAN
6 Moral Economies of Family Reunification in the Trump Era: Translating Natural Affiliation, Autonomy, and Stability Arguments into Constitutional Rights
KERRY ABRAMS AND DANIEL PHAM

PART THREE
Navigating the Security State: Couples and State Bureaucracies
7 Negotiating Trust and Suspicion: Lawyers as Actors in the Moral Political Economy of Marriage Migration Management in Canada
ANNE-MARIE D’AOUST
8 Intimacy Brokers: The Fragile Boundaries of Activism for Heterosexual and Same-Sex Binational Couples in France 171
LAURA ODASSO AND MANUELA SALCEDO ROBLEDO
9 He Said, She Said: The Complexity of Oral Relationship Narratives as Written Factual Evidence in Belgian Marriage Fraud Investigations
MIEKE VANDENBROUCKE

PART FOUR
Challenging Neoliberal Affective Regimes: Care, Work, and Economy
10 “I Don’t Even Know Where My Heart Is Anymore”: Migrant Bachelors and Immigrant Wives Lost in Time, Space, and Im/mobility
PARDIS MAHDAVI
11 Intimate Citizens: Filipina Migrant Hostesses in Japan
RHACEL SALAZAR PARREÑAS
12 Same-Sex Marriage against the Deportation State
EITHNE LUIBHÉID
13 Epilogue: Love Triangle: Nation, Spouse, Citizen
AUDREY MACKLIN
Acknowledgments
Notes on Contributors
Index

About the author










ANNE-MARIE D'AOUST is an associate professor in political science at the Université du Québec à Montréal in Canada. She is the editor of Affective Economies, Neoliberalism, and Governmentality.

Product details

Authors Kerry Abrams, Saskia Bonjour, Anne-Marie D'Aoust, Anne-Marie D''''aoust, Betty de Hart, Massilia Ourabah, Daniel Pham, Grace Tran, Helena Wray, Ji-Yeon Yuh
Assisted by Anne-Marie D'Aoust (Editor)
Publisher Rutgers University Press
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 11.02.2022
 
EAN 9781978816701
ISBN 978-1-978816-70-1
No. of pages 306
Series Politics of Marriage and Gender: Global Issues in Local Contexts
Subject Social sciences, law, business > Social sciences (general)

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