Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
(JEMS)

ISSN 1369-183X print / 1469-9451 online

Volume 30, Number 2, March  2004

Special issue: Family migration in the new Europe
Guest editors:
Adrian Bailey and Paul Boyle

Articles
Abstracts

Articles

Adrian Bailey and Paul Boyle
Untying and retying family migration in the new Europe [Abstract]

Eleonore Kofman
Family-related migration: a critial review of European studies [Abstract]

Darren P. Smith
An ‘untied’ research agenda for family migration: loosening the ‘shackles’ of the past [Abstract]

Jeroen Smits, Clara H. Mulder and Pieter Hooimeijer
Migration of couples with non-employed and employed wives in the Netherlands: the changing effects of the partners’ characteristics [Abstract]

Parvati Raghuram
The difference that skills make: gender, family migration strategies and regulated labour markets [Abstract]

Liesbeth Heering, Rob van der Erf and Leo van Wissen
The role of family networks and migration culture in the continuation of Moroccan emigration: a gender perspective [Abstract]

Robin Flowerdew and Alaa Al-Hamad
The relationship between marriage, divorce and migration in a British data set [Abstract]

Agata Górny and Ewa Kępińska
Mixed marriages in migration from the Ukraine to Poland [Abstract]

Louise Ackers
Citizenship, migration and the valuation of care in the European Union [Abstract]

Keith Halfacree
Untying migration completely: de-gendering or radical transformation? [Abstract]

Abstracts

Adrian Bailey and Paul Boyle
Untying and retying family migration in the new Europe
Abstract This special issue comes at a time when political debates on the future of a ‘United Europe’ are raging. As more countries are gradually being introduced into the EU superstate, old questions take on new importance. The focus of this issue is on migration and, in particular, family migration. We suggest that this is a critical topic in the European research agenda. We consider both how family-related migration affects the social, demographic, and economic contours of the emerging European superstate, and also how the superstate and its political functioning itself influences family migration. We argue that the transformation of Europe into a single market represents a significant conceptual challenge for those accounts of family migration that wish to inform social policy. However, to date, research on family migration in Europe lacks the coherent theoretical focus exhibited by case-study research from North America. Also, despite the recent recognition that most geographic mobility implicitly and explicitly involves families, the role of the household in migration continues to be poorly understood, particularly in the European context.
Keywords: Family migration; New Europe; Gender; Demographic ageing; Labour markets
(Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies Vol. 30 No. 2, © 2004 Taylor and Francis Ltd)

Eleonore Kofman
Family-related migration: a critial review of European studies
Abstract Despite being the dominant mode of legal entry for the past two decades in European Union states, the study of family migration has been marginalised theoretically, methodologically and empirically. In settler societies, family migration has been interpreted more loosely and has been encouraged. The definition of who constitutes the family is determined by the state and is generally interpreted in highly restrictive terms in EU states. Family-related migration has been neglected because of the emphasis in migration studies on the individual, a heavily economic focus, and an association with female migration based on the dichotomy of male producer and female reproducer. In policy terms it is treated as a secondary form of migration subordinate to and divorced from labour markets. However since the late 1980s family-related migrations have become the subject of scholarly research, especially North American and Asian-Pacific, using network analysis and, more recently, concepts of transnationalism. In this paper I firstly explore the reasons for the relative neglect of family-linked migration in European research which has focused on the integration of migrant families in receiving societies and the legal and policy conditions of family reunification. Secondly, I examine some of the implications of changing family-led migration, especially at key moments and stages of the life course, and the increasing restrictions imposed on this form of migration, highlighting the continuing role of the nation-state.
Keywords: Family; Migration; Europe, Gender; Policies
(Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies Vol. 30 No. 2, © 2004 Taylor and Francis Ltd)

Darren P. Smith
An ‘untied’ research agenda for family migration: loosening the ‘shackles’ of the past
Abstract This paper focuses on recent methodological and theoretical developments associated with studies of long-distance family migration. The starting point for the discussion is that previous quantitative-based studies have over-privileged economic-related outcomes, and masked the underlying social and cultural decision-making processes of family migrants. Emphasising the perceived merits of qualitative frameworks to tease out the ‘non-economic’ dimensions of family migration, the paper identifies two issues of concern. First, some current under-researched themes of family migration are illuminated, and an unfolding research agenda for qualitative studies of family migration is outlined. It is contended that this provides a useful entrée to future research activities. Second, and with this in mind, the paper stresses the need for more sophisticated analyses of the human agency of family migrants. Therefore, and building upon Halfacree’s thesis of the intentional/unintentional agency of family migrants, an adaptation of Giddens’ stratification model of action is presented. It is argued that this will allow a more structurationist reading of family migration decision-making processes, and a fuller understanding of non-economic processes and outcomes. Finally, the paper stresses the complementarity between qualitative and qualitative methods, and calls for the utilisation of mixed-method research designs for studies of family migration.
Keywords: Long-distance family migration; Qualitative methods; Biographical approach; Agency
(Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies Vol. 30 No. 2, © 2004 Taylor and Francis Ltd)

Jeroen Smits, Clara H. Mulder and Pieter Hooimeijer
Migration of couples with non-employed and employed wives in the Netherlands: the changing effects of the partners’ characteristics
Abstract Data for 1977 and 1995/96 are used to study (changes in) the effects of the partners’ resources on long-distance migration of couples in the Netherlands. The analyses were performed separately for couples with employed and with non-employed women. In 1977, couples with non-employed women showed the classical pattern of family migration, with strong effects of the human capital and labour market characteristics of the male and the females mostly using their power to prevent migration. The couples with employed women, on the other hand, in 1977 already showed a more modern pattern of family migration. The effects of the male's occupational prestige and sector were not significant for these couples and an age advantage of the male did not lead to more migration. Over time, the position of the employed women seems to have become even stronger and our results suggest that in 1996 at least some of them were able to initiate a move for their own career and hence to turn their husband into a tied mover.
Keywords: Long-distance migration; Wife’s employment; Changing influence; Marital power
(Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies Vol. 30 No. 2, © 2004 Taylor and Francis Ltd)

Parvati Raghuram
The difference that skills make: gender, family migration strategies and regulated labour markets
Abstract Although skilled migration now represents the only 'acceptable' form of migration into the UK there has so far been little analysis of the ways in which the shift in the skills of the primary migrant reconfigures family migration. In this paper I outline some reasons for this neglect highlighting the ways in which two related sets of debates, that on gender and international migration into Europe and that on tied migration, have not yet adequately addressed the changing role of migrant women in contemporary labour markets. Both offer a critique of patriarchy within the household but neither have examined the ways in which immigration regulations intersect with labour market conditions in influencing family strategies around labour market participation of men and women in migrant households. Through the example of medical labour markets I argue that such an analysis is necessary for understanding family migration amongst the skilled.
Keywords: Family migration; Skilled migration; Gender; Medical labour markets; Immigration regulations; Career structure
(Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies Vol. 30 No. 2, © 2004 Taylor and Francis Ltd)

Liesbeth Heering, Rob van der Erf and Leo van Wissen
The role of family networks and migration culture in the continuation of Moroccan emigration: a gender perspective
Abstract About 1.5 million people of Moroccan origin live as legal migrants in the countries of the European Union. For several decades, emigration has affected various provinces of Morocco. In some regions, the process started more than forty years ago; in others the migration experience is much more recent. This study seeks to portray from a micro perspective the ongoing migration processes from Morocco, in particular to Western Europe. Emphasis is placed on the effect of family networks and migration culture on the intention to emigrate of Moroccan men and women without international migration experience. We focus especially on gender differences since the position and the roles played by men and women both within the family and within the Moroccan society are very different. This gender distinction reveals remarkable differences between men and women in the intention to emigrate, and in its explanation. For men, emigration intentions are stronger in regions having a migration culture, while at the same time the presence of family networks abroad has a negative but small effect on the emigration intention. For women, however, the existence of a migration culture has no effect on the intention to leave the country, whereas family networks abroad tend to increase this intention. Interestingly, women with a paid job and who judge their financial situation negatively have the highest emigration intentions. This may indicate that, among Moroccan women, the more modernised, especially, intend to migrate. The more conservative Moroccan women are not likely to express an intention to migrate on their own. Rather, they behave in a manner that suits the husband or family. This behaviour may, or may not, include an emigration decision.
Keywords: Migration; Migration culture; Family networks; Gender; Morocco
(Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies Vol. 30 No. 2, © 2004 Taylor and Francis Ltd)

Robin Flowerdew and Alaa Al-Hamad
The relationship between marriage, divorce and migration in a British data set
Abstract Family and kinship factors are important as motivations for moving and as major considerations promoting or deferring migration. This is most obviously the case for family events that involve the establishment of new households or the dissolution of old ones, through cohabitation, marriage, separation and divorce. The overall importance of such events can be gauged from life-history data where the timing of residential moves and family events are both recorded. One such data set, from the Social Change and Economic Life Initiative, is used in this paper. The results confirm that there is indeed a relationship between these family events and migration, although there is a surprising number of separations, in particular, which do not seem to have involved residential moves. It may be noted that migration does not necessarily coincide exactly with marriage or divorce, and moves related to these events may sometimes occur a year or two before or after. This is to be expected because residential moves associated with household formation or dissolution may occur well before the family event is made official through marriage or divorce.
Keywords: Marriage; Divorce; Migration; Social change; Economic life initiative
(Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies Vol. 30 No. 2, © 2004 Taylor and Francis Ltd)

Agata Górny and Ewa Kępińska
Mixed marriages in migration from the Ukraine to Poland
Abstract In the early 1990s, Poland, a previously migrant-exporting country, became the destination for immigrants from a range of different regions and countries. Most foreigners came from the former Soviet Union and especially from the Ukraine. The article uses the case study of Polish–Ukrainian marriages to demonstrate the importance of the phenomenon of mixed marriages in the light of contemporary migration to Poland. It is shown that temporary movements to Poland contribute to the volume of mixed marriages that are contracted and that the population of foreigners married to Polish citizens constitutes a large part of contemporary settlement migration to Poland. We argue that patterns of mixed marriages and their formation can be explained by an economic approach to human behaviour, adjusted so as to take into account a framework of migration from ex-USSR to Poland.
Keywords: Ukraine–Poland migration; Mixed marriages; Mates selection; Economic approach; Gender
(Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies Vol. 30 No. 2, © 2004 Taylor and Francis Ltd)

Louise Ackers
Citizenship, migration and the valuation of care in the European Union
Abstract This paper examines the relationship between care and mobility. It does so within the specific context of intra-EU migration and the development of European citizenship. Citizenship of the Union bestows valuable social rights on mobile community nationals. Entitlement under the provisions is not, however, universal but conditional and privileges those in paid work. The paper considers the implications of this emphasis on paid work in two related respects: firstly, the impact on those people who move as part of the ‘male breadwinning family’ but are not engaged in paid work (the partners and families of workers); and secondly those community citizens whose migration decisions are shaped by the need to provide unpaid care to family members. Drawing on empirical research with migrant families, the paper concludes that the concept of work in Community law places those people who are not engaged in paid work (and family carers in particular) in a highly vulnerable and dependent position. Furthermore, the assumption of fixed and predictable dependency relationships within migrant families that underpins the law (and to some degree migration theory) fails to take account of the fluid and complex nature of dependency and caring relationships over the life-course.
Keywords: Migration; Mobility; Care; Citizenship; Family; European law; Life-course
(Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies Vol. 30 No. 2, © 2004 Taylor and Francis Ltd)

Keith Halfacree
Untying migration completely: de-gendering or radical transformation?
Abstract Tied migration for (heterosexual) partners has been shown to have a clear gender dimension; it is usually the female migrant who is ‘tied’ – whose employment career is negatively disrupted for the sake of her male partner’s employment career progression. A clear policy and cultural outcome from this work would be to advocate the diffusion of egalitarian household decision-making environments with respect to employment careers. Thus, labour migration will become ‘de-gendered’. This paper problematises this liberal and meritocratic agenda by pointing to some of its more problematic elements. These difficulties arise from a discursive narrowing of the concept of ‘career’ and serve to promote a limited instrumentalist esprit de vivre on the part of both men and women. More generally, de-gendering labour migration fits conveniently with the enhanced globalisation project of contemporary capitalism. The importance of ties to distinctive places for people’s everyday life and well-being is excised from such a project, and de-gendering labour migration can facilitate this excision. Thus, I argue for a radical utopian political project that enmeshes de-gendering within a broader critique of current socio-political structures. In sum, migration must be untied completely.
Keywords: Tied migration; Gender; Patriarchy; Global capitalism; Radical politics
(Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies Vol. 30 No. 2, © 2004 Taylor and Francis Ltd)