Life is an adventure and the study of Cultural Anthropology is a wonderful tool to guide through the journey. Together on this journey we discover and learn how through the diversity and color shades of practices and customs we have so much in common - that is the human aspect of the every day life, the desire of happiness, the experience of pain and grief, the delights of what it means to be a human!
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Migration in Southern Kyrgyzstan
Title: Leaving to enable others to remain: remittances and new moral economies of migration in southern Kyrgyzstan[1]
Publication details: Central Asian Survey, 30:3-4, December 2011, pp. 541-554
Author: Eliza Isabaeva, PhD Candidate at the URPP Asia and Europe, University of Zurich, Switzerland
Abstract:
This article seeks to extend the scope of existing literature on migration in Kyrgyzstan by revealing the material and moral assessment of labor migration and remittances amongst the people of Sopu Korgon, a village in Southern Kyrgyzstan. Remittances perform important social roles in sustaining social relations, making absent migrants ‘present’, gaining and/or retaining social status, passing through rites of passage and fostering the emergence of a new wealthy elite. Drawing on ethnographic research, the author examines the ambivalent opinions that surround the issue of migration and explores the idioms through which family absence is justified. The author argues that in addition to the important social functions of remittances, migrants’ transfers in Sopu Korgon also help immediate family members to remain in the village and sustain their lives there. This is in turn suggests that migrants’ money ‘slows up time’ for other family members, delaying their own need to migrate.
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