Did the Victorians Accept Female Marriage?

2007 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-80
Author(s):  
Laura E. Nym Mayhall
Keyword(s):  
2001 ◽  
Vol 33 (2) ◽  
pp. 305-310 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. BIONDI ◽  
P. RASPE ◽  
C. G. N. MASCIE-TAYLOR

Data on grandparental surnames were obtained from schoolchildren in 22 communes from Campobasso Province, Italy (Molise Region). The distribution of surnames was shown to be almost exactly linear by a log2–log2 transformation, which justified the fitting of the data to Fisher’s logarithmic distribution. The values for ν were higher among women. When ν was standardized to minimize bias due to sample size, the value was one-third the estimate of migration from exogamy data. The higher values of ν for females indicate that there is greater mobility of female marriage partners than males.


2018 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 117-120
Author(s):  
James Cheng

This issue contains three research articles and one obituary, which of them includes “Self-Initiated Expatriates: Taiwanese Migrant Professionals in China’s Global Cities” by Jianbang Deng, “Cultural Adaptation of Taiwanese Female Marriage Migrants in Hong Kong” by Lan-Hung Nora Chiang and Chia-Yuan Huang, “Settling Across the Strait of Taiwan under Japanese Colonialism (1895–1945)” by Leo Douw, and his another paper “Arif Dirlik (1940–2017) Obituary.” These four papers were invited to submit to the Translocal Chinese editorial board after a small conference entitling “Research on Taiwanese Overseas Qiaomin (台灣海外僑民之研究)” at Soochow University on 19 January 2018, but only two of them was accepted after blind peer review. Douw’s articles later joined this issue, which constructs a significantly common topic for the three research papers—Taiwanese Migration to Mainland China in Different Ages. Deng’s paper explores how about the transformation of Taiwanese migrants into self-initiated expatriates in China’s global cities. Chiang and Huang explain how successful the Taiwanese female marriage migrants in Hong Kong despite their ever much difficulties. Douw tells the distinct identities between Registered Taiwanese (台灣籍民) in China and Taiwanese Huaqiao (台灣華僑) in Taiwan.


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