scholarly journals ‘Troubling’ Migrant Families: Representations of Family and Migration in Official Lithuanian Policy Documents

2020 ◽  
pp. 52-63
Author(s):  
Irena Juozeliūnienė ◽  
Indrė Bielevičiūtė

This chapter set up to examine the language of ‘family’ in key policy documents regulating family life in Lithuania. Drawing on theoretical ideas of Ribbens McCarthy the authors look into the ways of framing of family life, identify scripts of ‘normal’ family, and analyse how these, in turn, sought to portray migrant families as ‘troubling’. The research presented here was carried out in January-May 2018 and formed a sub-study of the project ‘Global Migration and Lithuanian Family: Family practices, circulation of care and return strategies’ (2017–2019) funded by the Lithuanian Research Council. Analysis of the strategic policy documents regulating family life in Lithuania in the period from 1995 to 2018 has revealed that the imagined orders of family life evolve over time, which explains the changes in the language used to describe family lives. The authors have identified the ways of portraying Lithuanian ‘family’ as ‘normal’, ‘harmonious’, and ‘sovereign’, and examined how legislators ‘troubled’ migrant families or – in a long run – depicted them as ‘sovereign, but silenced’ and as ‘important, but mysterious’.

2020 ◽  
pp. 78-97
Author(s):  
Irena Juozeliūnienė ◽  
Indrė Bielevičiūtė ◽  
Irma Budginaitė-Mačkinė

In this chapter the authors examine how parenting in migration context is portrayed in the academic discourse in Lithuania. The authors reveal the depictions of migration-induced child caring practices, based on the results of analysis of academic publications (2004–2017) carried out from January to March 2018 as part of the sub-study of the research project ‘Global Migration and Lithuanian Family: Family Practices, Circulation of Care, and the Return Strategies’. The chapter focus on the portrayal of parenting within the host country, after return from emigration and in transnational family settings. The analysis reveals how value judgements about family life rooted in the low mobility discourse are reproduced in academic publications on family and migration and lead the researchers to portray parenting in migration as ‘troubling’.


2020 ◽  
pp. 65-76
Author(s):  
Irena Juozeliūnienė ◽  
Indrė Bielevičiūtė ◽  
Irma Budginaitė-Mačkinė

In this chapter the authors set out to examine how migrant families are named and framed in academic publications by Lithuanian researchers published from 2004 to 2017, available in Lithuanian and international academic databases. The authors aim to disclose how Lithuanian academics perceive the change of family boundaries and fluidity of family relations in the context of global migration, and how the meanings of ‘change’ are used within academic publications that have sought to define the migrant family life as ‘troubling’. The analysis of publications presented in this chapter was carried out from January to March 2018. It formed a sub-study of the research project ‘Global Migration and Lithuanian Family: Family Practices, Circulation of Care, and Return Strategies’ (2017–2019), funded by the Lithuanian Research Council. The analysis has revealed that Lithuanian researchers portray migrant families as extended in space, liquid, networked, survived, but unsecure because of ongoing risks as well as experiencing ‘losses’ or/ and ‘gains’. The researchers conclude that portraits presented by the academics are framed by the family ideology, while naming of migrant families highly rely on the images of ‘how a family should be’.


2006 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 27
Author(s):  
Mustaffa Samad

The Internet has been an integral part of the Information and Communication Technology (ICT) community in recent years. New internet users have been growing steadily over the years. This has lead to the depletion of new Internet Protocol (IP) addresses worldwide. To overcome this predicament, the new Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) had been introduced. The existing Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) is expected to be eventually replaced by this IPv6. The changeover from IPv4 to IPv6 is expected to be implemented progressively. During this transition period, these two protocols are expected to coexist for a number of years. IPv4-to-IPv6 transition tools have been designed to facilitate a smooth transition from IPv4 to IPv6. The two most basic IPv4-to-IPv6 transition tools available are the hybrid stack mechanism and tunneling. Tunneling is the encapsulation of IPv6 traffic within IPv4 packets so they can be sent over an IPv4 infrastructure. This project was initiated to set up an experimental IPv6 testbed, in order to study the performance as well as transition and migration issues of IPv6 networks under controlled conditions. This paper looks at how tunneling can be performed over existing internetwork infrastructure at Fakulti Kejuruteraan Elektrik (FKE), UiTM.


2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (7) ◽  
pp. 1304-1319
Author(s):  
M.V. Moroshkina

Subject. This article examines the issues related to changes in reproduction capacity and heterogeneity of the development of Russian regions. Objectives. The article aims to assess regional differentiation and investigate the main factors influencing the uneven development of the areas. Methods. For the study, we used the methods of comparative and correlation analyses. Results. The article identifies groups of leading and lagging Russian regions and assesses the possibility of convergence of Russian regions according to the analyzed indicators, such as GRP, GRP per capita, and the output of industry. Conclusions. The results obtained can be used when preparing strategic policy documents, spatial development programmes and concepts. The observed heterogeneity suggests that the regions maintain their positions throughout the research period.


Think India ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-41
Author(s):  
Sreekumar Ray

Ethics in Business are keywords in any business environment which are lacking in most of the cases. In a broad sense ethics means not to cheat others and to do the business in an honest way, to abide by the rules and regulations of the soil, and above all to keep the morale high so that the business can grow to a new height in long run. Unfair means and unethical business practices to earn money quickly are often fraught with the danger of losing the business permanently or losing the goodwill and respect of society. West Bengal has got bad reputation for industrial growth and fake chit funds and it has been named as ponzy capital of India by many as 72 out of 86 fake chit funds are in the state of West Bengal (as per the Report of Ministry of Corporate Affairs, Govt. of India). On the other hand the micro finance company Bandhan which has got Banking license last year (set up in 2001 in West Bengal) and Eins Edutech the company which was originally incorporated on March 9, 1983, as Ganpat Udyog in West Bengal are worth mentioning and at ease one can feel proud of them. As on 17th April, 2015 the latter company has got market capital of Rs.700 crore with its fixed assets, as per its balance sheet, as only two cell phones and one printer. As per monthly status of Bandhan in February 2015 it has 2,022 branches, 63,66,269 borrowers, 15,956 staff, loan disbursed for the month Rs.1,572 crores, and loan outstanding Rs.8,908 crores. Under such situation, this study focuses on the ethical business environment prevailing in West Bengal and the strategies adopted by them.


2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. e1176
Author(s):  
Marcelo Santos

Based on the main contributions of normative political theory on global justice and migration ethics, this article assesses the global Compacts on refugees and migration, approved by the United Nations General Assembly in December 2018. The set of conclusions indicates that the Compacts constitute an important advance in global moral and political projects and commitments. However, the application of their predicted terms can bring about problems, distortions, and impasses in the sharing of responsibilities.


Author(s):  
Raelene Wilding

Digital media are transforming families and relationships. Whether these changes are best thought of as positive or negative needs to be considered within a larger context of social transformation, in which changing gender roles and labor markets, cultural norms of intimacy and relationships, and globalization and migration are also contributing to rapid changes in family life. Drawing on recent theoretical developments that emphasize family as a set of practices and digital media as simultaneously social and technological, this chapter considers the intersections of family and technology across the life course, from partnering to pregnancy and adoption to parenting, family support, and aged care. The evidence suggests a mixed impact of digital media on family life. The popularity of digital media suggests that there is a strong desire for families to remain in touch and that people use digital media to maintain strong bonds of intimacy and family connection, even when circumstances require them to live at a distance. In some cases, access to digital media is contributing to the democratization of relationships across gender, class, and age groups. At the same time, it appears that digital media are also capable of both reinforcing existing inequalities and generating new asymmetries of power. To illustrate these complex trends, examples are drawn from a rich and growing body of research on how families are using digital media around the world and with what consequences, including the experiences of migrants and refugees.


1978 ◽  
Vol 23 (1_suppl) ◽  
pp. 1-21 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip Barker

It is impossible to make any sort of comparative evaluation of the various treatment methods which have been recommended and tried for severe, chronic emotional and behavioural disorders in children and young people. Although many programs exist, and many more have existed and been reported, the case material has seldom been clearly defined, outcome studies have been limited and longer-term follow-up almost nil. To take simply the few programs which have been discussed in this paper, it is not known whether the young people treated in the California Youth Project, Aycliffe School, the Cotswold Community and the Alberta Parent Counsellors program are at all similar. All programs claim to be treating seriously disturbed children, but more detailed descriptions are needed. Achievement Place claims it deals with “pre-delinquent” youths, while clearly St. Charles Youth Treatment Centre, Aycliffe School and the California Youth Project treat serious established delinquents. So it may indeed be true, as Hoghughi (21) has suggested, that methods that work in certain situations are not readily transferred to others. Balbernie (8) seems to be on the right lines when he calls for precise diagnosis with an accurate definition of what the problem is and of who is supposed to be doing what about it, and with what aims. Similarly precise requirements seemed to be the policy of Hoghughi at Aycliffe School, when this was visited. Despite the problems of evaluating the different therapeutic approaches, certain points do seem clear from this review and from visits to centres. 1. In many cases treatment of the seriously disturbed, previously intractable, child is a very long-term proposition. A commitment to work with the boy, girl or family for several years, is often necessary. 2. Improvement achieved in residential settings, and while active treatment is in progress, is not always maintained subsequently. There is need for much more investigation of what determines whether improvement is maintained, but many programs provided little data about the aftercare given and the longer-term follow-up of the children treated. 3. Intensive treatment, whether residential or not, only makes sense in the context of a long-continuing program of management. Yet many programs, even the best ones, seem to work in relative isolation. 4. Sequential treatment seems to have much to recommend it, and is used, though in a somewhat different way, by all the four British programs that were visited. 5. Some severely disturbed children can be treated in alternative family settings, but which ones, and with what long-term results, is quite vague. These programs do however have several advantages: they keep children in the community, if not in their own homes; they avoid the dangers of institutionalization and the contaminant effects of living with a delinquent peer group; and they approximate more closely the sort of situation (that is, normal family life) which treatment should be helping children to adapt. They are also much less expensive than residential treatment. 6. There is a role for secure units. All who are familiar with the clinical group we are discussing are aware of the existence of a sub-group of very aggressive and violent children who must first be contained. Some of these children can only be constructively treated in a highly secure and very well-staffed unit, but in such a setting it seems that there is a prospect of providing them with some real help. The British “Youth Treatment Centre” concept does seem a useful one. Many points are unclear. These include the following: 1. Does family therapy have a significant part to play in these cases? There is suggestive evidence that it may in some, but many of these children have no families, or at least none with whom they are in contact, and often have been in institutions for much of their lives. 2. What future is there in “intermediate treatment” and community work? Is it in any way realistic to expect to help severely disturbed children by work in the community of which they are part? 3. Can a community approach like that of the California Youth Project make a real contribution to the problem? It seems that in many cases it is better than traditional institutional treatment, but that itself has great limitations. 4. Which of the many residential programs that have been tried is best for which type of problem? 5. How can residential programs be integrated with services in the child's own community to best advantage? 6. What should be the longer term aims of treatment? The various reports of different programs rarely consider this. In conclusion, two points stand out. The first is the need for properly planned and executed research into the treatment of these disorders. It is amazing that so much has been spent on treatment and so little on its evaluation. Perhaps residential treatment is often seen more as a way of getting difficult children out of their communities. The second conclusion is that surely more effort should be made to prevent these disorders. Relatively few of the children under consideration have been brought up in stable, loving homes by their two natural parents. The apparently progressive deterioration of family life, the abandonment of children to day care, the abrogation by many parents of real responsibility for their children and the loss of moral values and religious beliefs are alarming features of contemporary life. Bronfenbrenner (12) has recently commented on how “the American family is falling apart”, and expressed alarm about the current tendency of people to do their “own thing”, to the exclusion of the interests of others. While most children seem to be able to grow up healthily even in contemporary society, the number who become severely disturbed seems likely to increase as these changes in society occur. At the very least we should give a high priority to giving the very best alternative care to children deprived of normal family life.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2 (1-2016) ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
Tobias Heinze ◽  
Sebastian Illigens Sebastian Illigens ◽  
Michael Pollok

Determining European territory is a delicate endeavor. A definite borderline is hard to identify. Instead, European security discourse spans a space with conditional qualities: open for some, impervious for many. Referring to Judith Butler's theory, this constribution’s aim is to disclose performative forces that create corresponding subject-categories. Particularly, expert-driven legislation on migration and the militarization of the security discourse is relevant. It is possible to reconstruct a multidimensional matrix of intelligibility. For this, relevant policy documents are analyzed by conducting a qualitative content analysis. This contribution allows to critically question foundational dimensions of European identity constituted by regulatory and exclusive practices at the borders.


1982 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 4-26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas K. Morrison

It has often been suggested that U.S. foreign economic policies, including the areas of aid, trade and investment, could be utilized to influence migration pressures in major sending countries. This study explores the feasibility of this proposition by examining the linkages between these U.S. economic instruments and migration “push” factors. These linkages are shown to be indirect, are often quite complex, and the final impact on migration, except perhaps in the long run, is probably small in most cases.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document