2006
DOI: 10.1068/a37214
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Migration and the Transnational Habitus: Evidence from Canada and the Philippines

Abstract: Immigrants have been extensively studied, but the ways in which immigrants themselves make sense of their lifeworlds has not always been at the top of the agenda. Researchers are frequently interested in understanding the experiences of`the immigrant', as an objective analytical category, rather than the experiences of`an immigrant'. With this paper we do not claim to change that situation, but we do believe there are analytical tools available that would allow greater sensitivity to the lifeworlds of`an immig… Show more

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Cited by 289 publications
(263 citation statements)
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“…Kelly and Lusis (2006) have demonstrated the value of Bourdieu's notions of capital and habitus for understanding migrants' experiences. In particular, the valuation of individuals' economic capital, social capital (networks and connections that can be mobilised), and cultural capital (symbolic assets) is determined by habitus (the framework or social rules which determine worth).…”
Section: Health Care Migration and Knowledge Transfermentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Kelly and Lusis (2006) have demonstrated the value of Bourdieu's notions of capital and habitus for understanding migrants' experiences. In particular, the valuation of individuals' economic capital, social capital (networks and connections that can be mobilised), and cultural capital (symbolic assets) is determined by habitus (the framework or social rules which determine worth).…”
Section: Health Care Migration and Knowledge Transfermentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Rather than blindly seeing bonding social networks 'largely as an unmitigated good' (Edwards 2004), scholarly work has recognized the importance of dynamism across space and time within migrants' social networks (Ryan 2007) and of how social capital can have positive and negative impacts on migration processes and experiences (Edwards 2004;Ryan 2011) in the host society. Kelly and Lusis (2006) draw attention to the potential dangers new migrants face if they interact solely with co-ethnics who lack contacts in the wider host society. Such closed social networks align with the existence of negative social capital and the emergence of ethnic enclaves detached from the wider host society (Crowley and Hickman 2008).…”
Section: Migrant Social Networkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Kelly and Lusis, 2006). Habitus referring to transnational social fields implies a different meaning to that originally asserted as it is more defined by movement between places, which allows more reflexive considerations of an individual's action within structured positions.…”
Section: S O C I O L O G I J a I P R O S T O Rmentioning
confidence: 99%