Child Migration and Human Rights in a Global Age
Penulis
: Jacqueline Bhabha
Subyek
: Trafficked Children, law, Political Science,Right Issue,
Penerbit
: Princeton University Press
Ringkasan :Every year, tens of thousands of children cross borders alone. Some travel to
join families that have already migrated. Others leave home to flee war, civil
unrest, natural disaster, or persecution. Some migrate in search of work,
education, opportunity, adventure. Others travel separated from their families
but not actually alone, in the company of traffickers or smugglers, risking
exploitation and abuse. The majority, perhaps, travel for a combination
of reasons, part of the growing trend toward mixed migration. And yet, the
complexity of child migration is a largely untold and unanalyzed story. This
book is an effort to correct that omission.
Child migration is part of a contemporary phenomenon that changes
and shapes the world we live in. Migration affects not just the 3 percent1
of the global population who are migrants, but the vast majority who are
not. As villages become depleted of young adults and the population in
metropolitan centers changes beyond recognition within the space of a
couple of decades, as schools, hospitals, workplaces, and shops cater to an
increasingly diverse clientèle, so the cumulative impact of contemporary
migration irrevocably seeps into the fabric of everyday life. Many stories
have been told about this process, ranging from alarmist xenophobic accounts
of invasion and cultural pollution to cautious academic analyses of
the impact of migration flows on population stocks and domestic economic
prospects. They are interspersed with a range of literary and cinematic depictions
of the imaginative correlates of migration. Very few of these stories
center on the experiences of child migrants, the push and pull factors affecting
their movements, and the social and legal environments they populate.
This deficit is nontrivial. It affects the perception of migration as a whole
and the social investment it attracts. Migration is increasingly considered
a voluntary adult phenomenon requiring management and control. The claim to protective intervention or fiscally backed social engagement is ever-diminishing
now that concerns about the Holocaust and the brutalities of
the Cold War have given way to apprehensions about terrorists and welfare
scroungers. Children do not feature in this large-scale
picture, except as
occasional appendages to adults. But they should. The failure to attend to
child migration coincides with the diffusion of confused, unsatisfactory,
and frequently oppressive policies that should not stand up to careful public
scrutiny.
Daftar copy :
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Barcode |
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No. Rak |
Ketersediaan |
1 |
00131332 |
Perpustakaan Pusat |
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TIDAK DIPINJAMKAN |
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