94 research outputs found
Producing ideal Bangladeshi migrants for precarious construction work in Qatar
The paper analyses the mediation of Bangladeshi construction worker migration to the Gulf and how multiple and unpredictable risks and opportunities are co-created by brokers, employers and the state. It examines how migrants navigate these to achieve imagined futures and their own role in co-creating precarity. The authors employ a relational lens to examine why aspiring migrants choose informal brokers over formal migration managers. The everyday practices of brokers in producing ideal Bangladeshi workers for the Qatari labour market and how this precarises migrant labour are unpacked. Migrant and broker interviews provide insights into the degrees of precarity experienced at different stages of the migration process. Entangled with these processes of precarisation are the strategies employed by migrant workers to resist precarity and transform their social and economic positions in the long term. The rich accounts presented in the paper provide evidence on the dialectical relationship between migrants and migration intermediaries which contrasts with popular discourses about brokers as exploiters and migrants as victims without agency
Quantum cat maps with spin 1/2
We derive a semiclassical trace formula for quantized chaotic transformations
of the torus coupled to a two-spinor precessing in a magnetic field. The trace
formula is applied to semiclassical correlation densities of the quantum map,
which, according to the conjecture of Bohigas, Giannoni and Schmit, are
expected to converge to those of the circular symplectic ensemble (CSE) of
random matrices. In particular, we show that the diagonal approximation of the
spectral form factor for small arguments agrees with the CSE prediction. The
results are confirmed by numerical investigations.Comment: 26 pages, 3 figure
Regular graphs of large girth and arbitrary degree
For every integer d > 9, we construct infinite families {G_n}_n of
d+1-regular graphs which have a large girth > log_d |G_n|, and for d large
enough > 1,33 log_d |G_n|. These are Cayley graphs on PGL_2(q) for a special
set of d+1 generators whose choice is related to the arithmetic of integral
quaternions. These graphs are inspired by the Ramanujan graphs of
Lubotzky-Philips-Sarnak and Margulis, with which they coincide when d is prime.
When d is not equal to the power of an odd prime, this improves the previous
construction of Imrich in 1984 where he obtained infinite families {I_n}_n of
d+1-regular graphs, realized as Cayley graphs on SL_2(q), and which are
displaying a girth > 0,48 log_d |I_n|. And when d is equal to a power of 2,
this improves a construction by Morgenstern in 1994 where certain families
{M_n}_n of 2^k+1-regular graphs were shown to have a girth > 2/3 log_d |M_n|.Comment: (15 pages) Accepted at Combinatorica. Title changed following
referee's suggestion. Revised version after reviewing proces
From Victims of Trafficking to Freedom Fighters: Rethinking Migrant Domestic Workers in the Middle East
Throughout the Middle East migrant women are employed to work in peopleâs homes. While some experience good working relations with employers, others experience forms of abuse and labour coercion. This chapter evaluates critically different ways that system of unfree labour has been variously described and analysed as a form of âcontract slaveryâ, âdebt bondageâ and âtraffickingâ. It also shows how migrant women who describe themselves as âfreelancersâ exit their original employerâs home both to escape that relation and in hopes of securing a better situation outside of the regular system of employment. Freelancing is more than simply a form of resistance. Rather, women who work as freelance migrant domestic workers challenge directly that state enforced control over their mobility and are on the vanguard of those migrants who are seeking through their own actions to effect social change
Attempted suicide in Sri Lanka âAn epidemiological study of household and community factors
An individual's suicide risk is determined by personal characteristics, but is also influenced by their environment. Previous studies indicate a role of contextual effects on suicidal behaviour, but there is a dearth of quantitative evidence from Asia.Individual and community level data were collected on 165,233 people from 47,919 households in 171 communities in rural Sri Lanka. Data were collected on individual (age, sex, past suicide attempts and individual socioeconomic position (SEP)) and household (household SEP, pesticide access, alcohol use and multigenerational households) level factors. We used 3-level logit models to investigate compositional (individual) and contextual (household/community) effects.We found significant variation between households 21% (95% CI 18%, 24%) and communities 4% (95% CI 3%, 5%) in the risk of a suicide attempt. Contextual factors as measured by low household SEP (OR 2.37 95% CI 2.10, 2.67), low community SEP (OR 1.45 95% CI 1.21, 1.74), and community 'problem' alcohol use (OR 1.44 95% CI 1.19, 1.75) were associated with an increased risk of suicide attempt. Women living in households with alcohol misuse were at higher risk of attempted suicide. We observed a protective effect of living in multigenerational households (OR 0.53 95% CI 0.42, 0.65).The outcome was respondent-reported and refers to lifetime reports of attempted suicide, therefore this study might be affected by socially desirable responding.Our study finds that contextual factors are associated with an individual's risk of attempted suicide in Sri Lanka, independent of an individual's personal characteristics
Democracy, development and the executive presidency in Sri Lanka
This paper examines the developmental causes and consequences of the shift from a parliamentary to a semi-presidential system in Sri Lanka in 1978, examining its provenance, rationale, and its unfolding trajectory. drawing on a wide range of sources, it set out an argument that the executive presidency was born out of an elite impulse to create a more stable, centralised political structure to resist the welfarist electoral pressures that had taken hold in the post-independence period, and to pursue a market-driven model of economic growth. This strategy succeeded in its early years 197801993, when presidents retained legislative control, maintained a strong personal commitment to market reforms, and cultivated alternative sources of legitimacy. In the absence of these factors, the presidency slipped into crisis over 1994-2004 as resistance to elite-led projects of state reform mounted and as the president lost control of the legislature. Since 2005 the presidency has regained its power, but at the cost of abandoning its original rationale and function as a means to recalibrate the elite/mass power relations to facilitate elite-led reform agendas
Diasporic Encounters, Sacred Journeys: Ritual, Normativity and the Religious Imagination Among International Asian Migrant Women
This issue highlights recent ethnographic work that discloses migrant womenâs creative engagements with the people and landscapes in the places they migrate to. We challenge a dominant view that construes women international migrants from Asia as docile bodies shaped and constrained by their transnational (re)productive labours. And we reject simplistic contemporary formulations of transnational migration that posit a singular, homogeneous âtransnational social fieldâ. Three key processes, relatively ignored and under theorised are interrogated: diaspora formation, ritual performance and changing normativities. A focus on diaspora encourages us to move beyond a political and economic analysis to consider cultural practices, continuities and discontinuities in migrantsâ relationships with the people and places they travel to, as well as those left behind. A focus on ritual emphasises the significance of religious performance in the making of place and convivial sociality. A focus on normativity foregrounds the ways that peopleâs affective relationships are performatively reworked and transgressed within and across discrepant diasporic spaces
Common mental disorders among adult members of âleft-behindâ international migrant worker families in Sri Lanka
Transnational migration, changing care arrangements and left-behind children's responses in South-east Asia
The authors are grateful to the Wellcome Trust, UK, for funding the CHAMPSEA project [GR079946/B/06/Z and GR079946/Z/06/Z], Asia Research Institute for funding the conference âInter-Asia Roundtable 2010 â Transnational Migration and Children in Asian Contexts' where this paper was first presented and Singapore Ministry of Education Academic Research Fund Tier 1 (R-109-000-156-112) for supporting the work behind the publication of this paper.Recent increases in the volume of labour migration from South-east Asia â and in particular the feminisation of these movements â suggest that millions of children are growing up in transnational families, separated from their migrant parents. Drawing on both quantitative and qualitative data collected in Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam, the study seeks to elucidate care arrangements for left-behind children and to understand the ways in which children respond to shifts in intimate family relations brought about by (re)configurations of their care. Our findings emphasise that children, through strategies of resistance, resilience and reworking, are conscious social actors and agents of their own development, albeit within constrained situations resulting from their parentsâ migration.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
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