Type | Working Paper |
Title | “It is not possible to ask all the time”: Transnational experiences of the women left behind in rural Nepal |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2013 |
Abstract | The studies of transnational migration have long been emphasized on labour equilibrium, economic remittances, problems at destination, the migrants themselves, and the arena of immigration studies in legal frameworks. It is not a new phenomenon, but has not gained attention of researchers, development workers and policy makers as an emergent social field, until recently. The field comprises persons who are engaged in living simultaneously in two spaces and making a living through regular contact across national borders. This paper aims to highlight the significance of non-migrating members in the phenomenon of migration and see how they experience it without physically moving. Drawing upon the stories of the women left behind by migrant workers in an eastern rural village of Nepal, the paper shows that like migrant husbands they also experience living transnationally, not by changing places but by actively participating in migration decisions and using modern means of communication like mobile phones during migration. They spend time together with their husbands over the phone on household management: receiving direction on household affairs and mobilizing resources. This double engagement of both husband and wife in ‘here’ and ‘there’ is narrowing down the boundary between the places of origin and destination and putting them into a single social field. |
» | Nepal - National Population Census 2001 |