Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Content
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Part 1 Social Media, Mobility, Transience And Transnational Relationships
- Chapter 1 Female Indonesian Migrant Domestic Workers in Hong Kong: A Case Study of Advocacy through Facebook and the Story of Erwiana Sulistyaningsih
- Chapter 2 Media and Mobilities in Australia: A Case Study of Southeast Asian International Students’ Media Use for Well–Being
- Chapter 3 Connecting and Reconnecting with Vietnam: Migration, Vietnamese Overseas Communities and Social Media
- Chapter 4 Liking It, Not Loving It: International Students in Singapore and Their Navigation of Everyday Life in Transience
- Part 2 Social Media And Existing Multicultural Relationships In A Controlled Communication Environment
- Notes on Contributors
- Index
Chapter 3 - Connecting and Reconnecting with Vietnam: Migration, Vietnamese Overseas Communities and Social Media
from Part 1 - Social Media, Mobility, Transience And Transnational Relationships
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 July 2017
- Frontmatter
- Content
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Part 1 Social Media, Mobility, Transience And Transnational Relationships
- Chapter 1 Female Indonesian Migrant Domestic Workers in Hong Kong: A Case Study of Advocacy through Facebook and the Story of Erwiana Sulistyaningsih
- Chapter 2 Media and Mobilities in Australia: A Case Study of Southeast Asian International Students’ Media Use for Well–Being
- Chapter 3 Connecting and Reconnecting with Vietnam: Migration, Vietnamese Overseas Communities and Social Media
- Chapter 4 Liking It, Not Loving It: International Students in Singapore and Their Navigation of Everyday Life in Transience
- Part 2 Social Media And Existing Multicultural Relationships In A Controlled Communication Environment
- Notes on Contributors
- Index
Summary
Over the last fifty years, Vietnam has experienced significant outmigration closely linked with the nation's social, political and economic fortunes. Many of those who left in the various waves of migration have been highly skilled, including the most recent flows of Vietnamese overseas students. Losing highly skilled human capital has been a major concern for a nation like Vietnam, which has been transitioning from a centrally planned socialist economy to a market economy, and has the ambition to become a modern, industrialized economy by 2020 (World Bank 2012). However, in recent years, there has been less concern surrounding a ‘brain drain’. This has arisen from the belief that there are in fact many advantages associated with being a ‘sending country’, including the financial benefits of remittances, the cultural engagement with diaspora communities, and the benefits of return migration (Gribble 2008). The rapid development and widespread availability of information communication technologies (ICTs) has facilitated the formation, growth and maintenance of diaspora communities’ transnational social networks. In addition, both traditional and social media provide opportunities for nations such as Vietnam to harness their diaspora's skills, knowledge, finances and networks in order to boost local social and economic development.
This chapter examines the complex relationship that Vietnam has with Vietnamese overseas communities. It starts with a review of existing literature on Vietnam's major migration trends and groups since the reunification of the country, including war- related Việt Kiều, overseas Vietnamese students and temporary migrant workers. It then discusses the current practices and approaches to harnessing the diaspora. A review of how some other Asian nations with large diaspora populations have engaged with their diaspora via social media is included as it provides some useful implications for Vietnam to develop stronger and more sustained connections with its diaspora. The chapter concludes by considering the role of social media and the recent developments in facilitating constructive dialogues between Vietnam and its diaspora via social media.
There have been three main phases of outmigration in Vietnam. The first phase was the outflow of Vietnamese refugees, including thuyền nhân (boat people), during the Vietnam war and the post- reunification period.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Asia-Pacific in the Age of Transnational MobilityThe Search for Community and Identity on and through Social Media, pp. 63 - 86Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2016