Product Description
International migration is favoured by the governments of many poorer countries despite often well-publicized abuses affecting individual migrant workers. Not only is local unemployment reduced but also it is expected that the migrants will learn new skills, with many even becoming entrepreneurs on their return home. Meantime they are seen as a source of foreign remittances, providing needed capital for economic development. Such is the attitude in Pakistan from where thousands of migrant workers leave every year for the Gulf states especially.
An anthropological study approaching this issue from a local (village) level, this book focuses on two areas of the Punjab. Describing the historical passage of rural life from pre-colonial times to the present, it shows how the rural economy of the Punjab was not transformed by the green revolution – on the contrary, it is still a subsistence economy. The resulting poverty combined with Pakistan’s labour-market policies forces many Punjabi men to seek work abroad, in turn bringing changes to the economic role of the women left behind. Remittances from abroad have brought further changes on the economic and social life of the villages but not, as expected, to bring economic development let alone capital or entrepreneurialism to the area.
Unsere Empfehlungen:
Plurk This Post
Post to Bebo
Buzz This Post
Delicious
Digg This Post
Post to Diigo
Facebook
Post to FriendFeed
Post to Google Buzz
Send Gmail
Post to LinkedIn
Mixx This Post
MySpace
Ping This Post
Reddit
Post to Slashdot
Post to Squidoo
Stumble This Post
Post to Technorati









