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The Labor of Care: Filipina Migrants and Transnational Families in a Digital Age

The Labor of Care: Filipina Migrants and Transnational Families in a Digital Age (University of Illinois Press, Spring 2018) is anchored in the experiences and lives of Filipina migrants and their families in the Philippines and the main objective of this book is to make visible all of the forms, roles and definitions of social reproductive labor and care work required in the maintenance … Read more

Forum on Transnational and Translational Asian American Studies

Date: January 6, 2014 Excerpts (in Chinese and English) from Panelists: Hsinya Huang Syaman Rapongan Russell C. Leong Other Panelists: Francis So (Providence U) SHAN Te-hsing (Academia Sinica) CHANG Shuli (Cheng Kung U) CHEN Shu-ching (Chung Hsing U) Jade Lee (Kaohsiung Normal U) CHEN Fujen (Sun Yat-sen U) Moderator: LEE Yu-cheng (Academia Sinica) Organizers College … Read more

Growing Up in Transnational Worlds: A Comparative Look at Chinese and Dominican Americans

Transnationalism refers to the phenomenon of immigrants maintaining connections to their country of origin, and employing a dual frame of reference to evaluate their experiences and outcomes in the country in which they have settled. How does transnationalism matter in the identities among the second generation, e.g., individuals who were born in the United States, … Read more

Kinship Networks and Rural Entrepreneurs in China’s Transnational Economy

Max Weber once observed that the strong lineage system in rural China had impeded the development of entrepreneurial capitalism in China. This paper attempts to reevaluate the old Weber thesis by empirically testing the relationship between kinship networks and the bourgeoning rural industrialization during the reform era. Analysis of village-level data shows that lineage networks, … Read more

Transnational Chinese Villagers: NY’s Fuzhounese Immigrants Build a Global Community

Over the past twenty years Fuzhounese immigrants have transformed the face of New York’s Chinatown, supplanting the Cantonese as Chinatown’s largest ethnic Chinese community and vying for leadership in the area’s economics, politics, social life, and even language use. Drawing upon ongoing field research in New York and Fuzhou, this lecture will explore the emergence … Read more

Transnational Feminism and the Politics of Women’s Rights in Japan

This presentation is based on information from Prof. Joyce Gelb’s soon to be released publication, “Gender Policies in Japan and the United States.” In it, Prof. Gelb explores the similarities and differences in gender related policy making and outcomes in Japan and the U.S., concentrating the areas of equal employment, domestic violence, and reproductive rights, … Read more