Managing Difference in Eastern-European Transnational Families. Eds. Viorela Ducu and Aron Telegdi Csetri. Frankfurt am Main, New York, Ofxord: Peter Lang, 2016.
https://www.peterlang.com/view/product/78329?tab=toc&format=EPDF
Studies in this book have been gathered on the occasion of two academic events in the field of Transnational Families, focusing on the Eastern-European space, from a – diversified – qualitative social research perspective. The volume places a special emphasis on a gendered and practice-oriented approach, exploring territories of domination and empowerment that inform the negotiation of difference. Studies follow processes of emancipation, family practices, redistribution of gendered roles, forms of abuse, social remittance, confrontation between rights and cultures, forming joint action strategies and egalitarian capital, in a process of emergence of new social actors. Studies reflect back upon the ambiguity of conceptual frameworks to be put to use while approaching this yet unexplored area.
Key words: Eastern-European, transnational families, migration, gender, motherhood, fatherhood, childhood
Contents
Acknowledgements
Notes on Contributors
Couples within the Context of Migration
Áron Telegdi-Csetri, Viorela Ducu. Transnational Difference – Cosmopolitan Meaning
Transnational Families in a Gendered Perspective
Alissa Tolstokorova. Partitioned Paternity: Models of Cross-border Fathering in Ukrainian Transnational Families
Rafaela Hilario Pascoal, Adina Nicoleta Erica Schwartz. How Family and Emotional Ties Are Used as Coercive Instruments by the Exploiters on the Romanian Feminine Migration. The Study Case of Italy
Anca Raluca Aștilean. The Issue of Emancipation in the Case of Romanian Migrant Women
Armela Xhaho, Erka Çaro. Gendered Work-Family Balance in Migration: Albanian Migrants in Greece
Couples within the Context of Migration
Magdalena Żadkowska, Tomasz Szlendak. Egalitarian Capital Gained in Norway or Brought from Poland? Experiences of Migration and Gender Equality among Polish Couples in Norway
Nóra Kovác. Global Migration and Intermarriage in Chinese-Hungarian Context
Viorela Ducu, Iulia Hossu. Bi-national Couples with a Romanian Partner in the European Context
Challenges of Transnationalism towards Childhood
Georgiana-Cristina Rentea, Laura-Elena Rotărescu. Yesterday’s Children, Today’s Youth: The Experiences of Children Left Behind by Romanian Migrant Parents
Bojan Perovic. Intercountry Adoption: a Human Rights Perspective
Index