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Transnational mobility and cross-border family life cycles: A century of Welsh-Italian Migration

    • University of Oxford

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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    Abstract

    During the late nineteenth century, Italian immigrant settlement in Wales took the form of chain and clustered migration, based on origin-centred networks of extended family members. The original migrants’ reliance on transnational family support networks endured and evolved through descendant generations. Family formation and the progression of lifecycle care exchanges served as key drivers of transnationalism between Wales and Italy. Many families established catering businesses in Wales that relied on staff recruitment from kin in Italy. Migrants’ heritage and affective anchorage to Italy were maintained through ‘circular’ mobility premised on endogamy and shared language. In recent decades, despite a decline in endogamous marriage, transnational family interaction has continued on the basis of the ease of European Union cross-border mobility. Changing modes and motives for cyclical and return migration encompass new forms of marriage, professional and retirement migration. Based on etnographic research with three generations of Italian migrants in Wales, this article explores the relation between family social networks and local attachment in supporting transnational practices, positive integration and heritage maintainance, tracing the cultural and social change in the generational process of migration.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)3157-3172
    JournalJournal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
    Volume45
    Issue number16
    Early online date4 Jan 2019
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 10 Dec 2019

    Keywords

    • Italian migration
    • Transnational families
    • cultural heritage
    • family care-giving
    • intergenerational relations
    • oral history
    • translocality

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