2 research outputs found
The hostile environment, Brexit, and âreactiveââ or âprotective transnationalismâ
The âreactive transnationalism hypothesisâ posits a relationship between discrimination and transnational practice. The concept has generally been studied using quantitative methods, but a qualitative approach augments our understanding of two contextâspecific dimensions: the nature of the discrimination involved, and the types of transnational behaviour that might be affected. Drawing on inâdepth interviews with Bangladeshâorigin Muslims in London, Luton and Birmingham, in the UK, we demonstrate how antiâAsian and antiâMuslim racism have been conflated with intensified antiâmigrant racism in the context of âhostile environmentâ immigration policies and the EU referendum (Brexit), producing an amplification of racist discourses associated with purging the body politic of its nonâwhite bodies. The insecurity generated is altering some people's relationships to Bangladesh, incentivizing investment in land and property âback home'. While this represents an example of âreactive transnationalism', we argue that âprotective transnationalismâ might be a more appropriate way of describing the processes at work