12 research outputs found

    ‘Albania: €1’ or the story of ‘big policies, small outcomes’: how Albania constructs and engages its diaspora

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    Since the fall of the communist regime in the early 1990s, Albania has experienced one of the most significant emigrations in the world as a share of its population. By 2010 almost half of its resident population was estimated to be living abroad – primarily in neighbouring Greece and Italy, but also in the UK and North America. This chapter discusses the emergence and establishment of the Albanian diaspora, its temporal and geographical diversity, and not least its involvement with Albania itself. Albania’s policymaking and key institutions are considered, with a focus on matters of citizenship; voting rights; the debate on migration and development; and not least the complex ways in which kin-state minority policies – related to ethnic Albanians living in Kosovo, Montenegro, southern Serbia, Macedonia and Greece – are interwoven with Albania’s emigration policies

    The intersection of gender and generation in Albanian migration, remittances and transnational care

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    The Albanian case represents the most dramatic instance of post-communist migration: about one million Albanians, a quarter of the country's total population, are now living abroad, most of them in Greece and Italy, with the UK becoming increasingly popular since the late 1990s. This paper draws on three research projects based on fieldwork in Italy, Greece, the UK and Albania. These projects have involved in-depth interviews with Albanian migrants in several cities, as well as with migrant-sending households in different parts of Albania. In this paper we draw out those findings which shed light on the intersections of gender and generations in three aspects of the migration process: the emigration itself, the sending and receiving of remittances, and the care of family members (mainly the migrants' elderly parents) who remain in Albania. Theoretically, we draw on the notion of `gendered geographies of power and on how spatial change and separation through migration reshapes gender and generational relations. We find that, at all stages of the migration, Albanian migrants are faced with conflicting and confusing models of gender, behavioural and generational norms, as well as unresolved questions about their legal status and the likely economic, social and political developments in Albania, which make their future life plans uncertain. Legal barriers often prevent migrants and their families from enjoying the kinds of transnational family lives they would like

    Question de parenté

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    Les Ă©tudes sur la parentĂ© et le mariage ont accompli d’immenses progrĂšs. AprĂšs tant de travaux parus depuis cinquante ans, ce numĂ©ro de L’Homme en apporte une preuve supplĂ©mentaire et qui fera date. De vieux dossiers sont rouverts, explorĂ©s et rĂ©interprĂ©tĂ©s en profondeur, ainsi le systĂšme dravidien. Le traitement algĂ©brique des systĂšmes de parentĂ© a pris en Hollande un nouvel essor. Des matĂ©riaux gĂ©nĂ©alogiques d’une richesse que n’aurait pu soupçonner William H. R. Rivers, recueillis dans diverses rĂ©gions du monde, peuvent ĂȘtre exploitĂ©s au moyen de l’informatique. L’originalitĂ© des vues thĂ©oriques, les rapprochements entre des domaines trĂšs divers renouvellent les problĂšmes discutĂ©s dans ce numĂ©ro, et leur portĂ©e s’étend bien au-delĂ 
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