Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- 1 Introduction: Return Migration/the Returning Migrant: To What, Where and Why?
- 2 Neither Necessity nor Nostalgia: Japanese-Brazilian Transmigrants and the Multigenerational Meanings of Return
- 3 The Fluidity of Return: Indian Student Migrants’ Transnational Ambitions and the Meaning of Australian Permanent Residency
- 4 Resident ‘Non-resident’ Indians: Gender, Labour and the Return to India
- 5 ‘It's Still Home Home’: Notions of the Homeland for Filipina Dependent Students in Ireland
- 6 Looking Back while Moving Forward: Japanese Elites and the Prominence of ‘Home’ in Discourses of Settlement and Cultural Assimilation in the United States, 1890-1924
- 7 Return of the Lost Generation?: Search for Belonging, Identity and Home among Second- Generation Viet Kieu
- 8 ‘A Xu/Sou for the Students’: A Discourse Analysis of Vietnamese Student Migration to France in the Late Colonial Period
- 9 ‘The Bengali Can Return to His Desh but the Burmi Can't Because He Has No Desh’: Dilemmas of Desire and Belonging amongst the Burmese- Rohingya and Bangladeshi Migrants in Pakistan
- Contributors
- Bibliography
- Index
- Global Asia
4 - Resident ‘Non-resident’ Indians: Gender, Labour and the Return to India
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 December 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- 1 Introduction: Return Migration/the Returning Migrant: To What, Where and Why?
- 2 Neither Necessity nor Nostalgia: Japanese-Brazilian Transmigrants and the Multigenerational Meanings of Return
- 3 The Fluidity of Return: Indian Student Migrants’ Transnational Ambitions and the Meaning of Australian Permanent Residency
- 4 Resident ‘Non-resident’ Indians: Gender, Labour and the Return to India
- 5 ‘It's Still Home Home’: Notions of the Homeland for Filipina Dependent Students in Ireland
- 6 Looking Back while Moving Forward: Japanese Elites and the Prominence of ‘Home’ in Discourses of Settlement and Cultural Assimilation in the United States, 1890-1924
- 7 Return of the Lost Generation?: Search for Belonging, Identity and Home among Second- Generation Viet Kieu
- 8 ‘A Xu/Sou for the Students’: A Discourse Analysis of Vietnamese Student Migration to France in the Late Colonial Period
- 9 ‘The Bengali Can Return to His Desh but the Burmi Can't Because He Has No Desh’: Dilemmas of Desire and Belonging amongst the Burmese- Rohingya and Bangladeshi Migrants in Pakistan
- Contributors
- Bibliography
- Index
- Global Asia
Summary
To be fair, the positives of life in India are many. No more visa hassles. No worrying about going out of status. No worrying about being an alien in a foreign land. The feeling that you can go anywhere and do whatever you want – it's your country.
AmreekanDesi 2009I’m glad I went back to India, and I’m glad to be back in the US. Life has come full circle but the center has shifted. I didn't go to India to find home, but I did find it; I now know where I belong. As Laozi might have said, sometimes the journey of a single step starts with a thousand miles in the opposite direction.
Mungee 2011No strangers to crossing the kala pani, or black sea, Indians have built communities around the world. Though many Indians have been in circulation between Africa, the Middle East, and the Caribbean for centuries, following independence from Britain in 1947 the pace of emigration intensified as Indians poured out of the country towards Western countries such as the United States (Bhatt and Iyer 2013; Jensen 1988; Leonard 1997). However, a new pattern of migration has emerged in recent years: increasing numbers of Indians are returning to India after long spells abroad. While this trend is largely attributed to the combination of burgeoning opportunities in the Indian economy and stagnating employment in the United States, the decision to return is not a strictly economic one for many Indians, particularly among highly educated ‘knowledge workers’ in the global information technology (IT) industry. These workers often endure years of uncertainty on temporary work permits in the United States to have the chance to amass prized educational, social and economic capital through their association with American IT companies. At the same time, these skills and networks make them particularly valuable to India-based branches of multinationals and Indian companies as potential ‘returnees.’
While several recent studies (Chacko 2007; Saxenian 2005; Wadhwa 2009a+b; Wadhwa et al. 2007) have examined the factors that prompt return migration to India and the experience of returnees or repatriates (‘repats’), in this chapter I consider how return migration is a gendered phenomenon that impacts not only workers, but the family members who also travel abroad and back to India as part of transnational labour flows.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Transnational Migration and AsiaThe Question of Return, pp. 55 - 72Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2015
- 1
- Cited by