ISBN:
9780786751426
,
0786751428
,
081332758X
Language:
English
Pages:
XIV, 265 Seiten
,
Karten
DDC:
304.85367
Keywords:
Foreign workers
;
History
;
Migrant labor Kuwait
;
Emigration and immigration law Kuwait
;
Migrant labor Kuwait
;
Social conditions
;
Kuwait Population
;
Kuwait Ethnic relations
;
Kuwait Social conditions
;
Kuwait
;
Kuwait
;
Ausländischer Arbeitnehmer
;
Bevölkerung
;
Kulturbeziehungen
;
Soziale Situation
;
Geschichte
;
Migrationspolitik
;
Einwanderung
;
Kuwait
;
Ausländischer Arbeitnehmer
;
Soziale Situation
Abstract:
When Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990, the sight of tens of thousands of non-Kuwaiti Arabs, Indians, East Asians, and Westerners fleeing or trapped under occupation made the outside world suddenly aware of a singular fact of Kuwaiti society'that Kuwaitis are an absolute minority in their own country. Basing her analysis on extensive fieldwork and archival research, the author examines the social dimension of labor migration to Kuwait since independence in 1961, exploring how the presence of over one million foreign workers has influenced the way Kuwaitis organize their lives and perceive themselves. In particular, Longva looks at the relations between two sharply differentiated social categories and the politics of exclusion that have allowed Kuwaitis to protect their rights and privileges as citizens against infringement by the huge influx of expatriates. Longva examines the little-studied system of kafala, or sponsorship, under which all foreign workers enter and reside in the country, showing how it has become the most critical source of power for native Kuwaitis vis-A-vis immigrants. She also addresses aspects of ethnicity and class, describes the life of expatriates, and looks at developments in gender relations and the role of women in building the national identity in the context of migration and modernization
Description / Table of Contents:
List of Tables and Figure; Acknowledgments; Map of Kuwait; Map of Kuwait City and Suburbs; 1 Introduction; 2 Kuwait Through History: A Tradition of Migration and Open Networks; 3 The Politics of Exclusion; 4 The Structure of Dominance: The Sponsorship System; 5 Conceptualizing ""Us"" and ""Them"" Through Everyday Practice; 6 Expatriate Life: Liminality and an ""Ad Hoc"" Way of Life; 7 Gender Relations, Ethnicity, and the National Project; 8 Pluralism and Integration; 9 Postscript; Bibliography; Index; About the Book and Author.
Description / Table of Contents:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 246-256) and index
URL:
http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0832/96049172-d.html
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