Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- I OLD IMMIGRATION COUNTRIES IN NORTHERN EUROPE
- PART II NEW IMMIGRATION COUNTRIES IN SOUTHERN EUROPE
- Gender and Migration in Southern Europe: A Comparative Approach to the Italian and Spanish Cases
- Ongoing Gendering and Ethnicising Processes: The Case of Recent Female Migration to Portugal
- Changing Patterns of Women's Migration: Greece in a Southern European Perspective
- Female Migration and Integration-related Policies in Cyprus
- PART III NEW IMMIGRATIONS IN TRANSFORMATION SOCIETIES
- Biographical Notes on the Authors
Ongoing Gendering and Ethnicising Processes: The Case of Recent Female Migration to Portugal
from PART II - NEW IMMIGRATION COUNTRIES IN SOUTHERN EUROPE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2014
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- I OLD IMMIGRATION COUNTRIES IN NORTHERN EUROPE
- PART II NEW IMMIGRATION COUNTRIES IN SOUTHERN EUROPE
- Gender and Migration in Southern Europe: A Comparative Approach to the Italian and Spanish Cases
- Ongoing Gendering and Ethnicising Processes: The Case of Recent Female Migration to Portugal
- Changing Patterns of Women's Migration: Greece in a Southern European Perspective
- Female Migration and Integration-related Policies in Cyprus
- PART III NEW IMMIGRATIONS IN TRANSFORMATION SOCIETIES
- Biographical Notes on the Authors
Summary
Introduction
Scholars addressing immigrant women issues in Portugal deplore the lack of academic research in the field (Hellermann 2005; Peixoto et al. 2006), although this has gained some momentum and visibility lately. This knowledge gap, and the new focus on immigrant women, is not surprising if one takes into account the fact that Portugal is a recent country of immigration and, more relevantly, that scientific research on women/gender was only recently established within the Portuguese academic field. Academics were reluctant to consider areas such as youth, daily life, the body, the family and women as “noble objects of study” (Joaquim 2004). It was not until 1995 that the first Master's degree in Women's Studies was founded at the Open University of Lisbon (Vaquinhas 2002; Joaquim 2004).
Research on issues of immigration and ethnicity on the one hand, and gender on the other, have both been extensive in recent years, although without significant crossing. As a matter of fact, ethnic and migration studies seldom encompass issues of gender, whilst gender studies seldom encompass issues of ethnicity/immigration. The lack of research on immigrant women, as well as media coverage of the topic, are reflections of both academic as well as social marginalisation of this issue. An analysis of the media's social representation of migrant women revealed that these women are referred to in newspapers with only concise and factual data, illustrating a process which abandons people in the margins of society (Santos 2005). Migrant women are generally denied the status of being an object of interest.
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- Information
- Women in New MigrationsCurrent Debates in European Societies, pp. 171 - 200Publisher: Jagiellonian University PressPrint publication year: 2010