Reproduction Migrations in the Asia Pacific
Industrialised countries in the West have attracted an ever larger proportion of immigrants since the late 1990s despite their decline in the share of global GDP. In contrast, a number of fast-developing countries in Asia, particularly China and those in South and Southeast Asia, have experienced rapid increases in outward mobility, even as they become new centres of the world economy. Why do the global distributions of migration and production mismatch? This project aims to test the hypothesis that reproduction—activities that maintain and reproduce human life on a daily and generational basis—is becoming a main driving force of migration. By “reproduction migration” (RM) we mean movement of people for the purpose of maintaining and reproducing life, both individual and collective. Such migration is closely bound up with people’s strategies and motives at successive life course stages. Migration provides a means by which people seek success in: childbearing and rearing; marriage; education; employment in care-giving at adult ages; and access to caregivers and affordable living standards in late life. Rates of RM are increasing much faster than that of productive labour. Advanced countries attract immigrants because, as global centres, they provide a greater concentration of opportunities for realising these strategies.
This seminar series is also a step towards developing a larger hypothesis that RM is becoming a critical source of economic value and will shape the world division of labour in the 21st century. By so doing we hope to nuance the currently dominant narrative that economic power is shifting from the West to the East.
A joint seminar series between the Fertility and Reproductions Studies Group (FRSG) and the Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS)
Type: Seminar Series
Series organisers:
Xiang Biao (Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, Oxford),
Mika Toyota (Rikkyo University),
Philip Kreager (Fertility and Reproduction Studies Group, University of Oxford)
Timing: Mondays 11:00 - 13:00
Web Address:
https://www.compas.ox.ac.uk/event/reproduction-migrations-in-the-asia-pacific
Organising department: Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS)
Talks:
No upcoming talks to display for this series.
Editors:
Alexis Still,
Nathan Grassi