1. Perceptions of Home and Border among Mainland Chinese Dual Migrants in Macao.
- Subjects
SENSORY perception ,MIGRANT labor ,ETHICAL investments ,TRANSNATIONALISM - Abstract
This paper focuses on the understandings of home and border perceived by mainland Chinese dual migrant laborers in Macao, China. "Dual migrants" are individuals who have left family and friends in other provinces of China, and migrate daily across a regulated, political border; in this case the border lies between Zhuhai (for housing) and Macao (for work). A total of 24 un-skilled mainland Chinese dual migrant participants (13 male security guards; 11 female cleaners) were recruited and engaged in in-depth interviews, group discussions and WeChat interviews. Findings show the co-existence of temporality and situatedness in the mobilized experiences of Chinese mainland dual migrants. Home is found to be both an emotional and social investment, tied to a fixed, remembered space, and a mobile, multi-layered, and unstable site, impacted by the experience of daily cross-border mobility. Taking the lens of transnationalism, the Zhuhai-Macao border is constructed as an important entity in participants' everyday life; the border is also an ambivalent and liminal space, serving the role of both connectivity and detachment. This study contributes to an understanding the strategies participants develop to adapt new environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018