Transnational Migration to Israel in Global Comparative Context

Cover
Sarah S. Willen
Lexington Books, 2007 - 268 Seiten
Transnational Migration to Israel in Global Comparative Context explores both how and why the recent influx of approximately two hundred thousand non-Jewish migrants from dozens of countries across the globe has led state officials to declare in definitive terms that Israel "is not on immigration country" despite its unwavering commitment to welcoming unlimited-numbers of "homeward-bound" Jewish immigrants. The presence of labor migrants, along with smaller groups of asylum seekers and victims of trafficking in women, has dramatically transformed the local labor economy of Israel/Palestine and generated a wide array of complicated legal, policy-related, cultural, and ideological questions and dilemmas for the Israeli state, local municipalities, and civil society. This book is distinctive not only in its incisive comparisons between Israel and other "destination countries," but also in its multifaceted analysis of how the Israeli migration regime has shaped, constrained, and been challenged by the arrival of these unanticipated migrants. These original essays analyze the relationship between transnational migration processes and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict; the heterogeneity of state and civil society responses to migrants' presence; transnational migrants' precarious status within existing local ethnoscapes and social hierarchies; the challenges their presence poses to Israel's distinctive citizenship regime; and undocumented migrants' efforts to craft "inhabitable spaces of welcome" within a consistently ambivalent and, since 2002, aggressively xenophobic host state. Book jacket.
 

Ausgewählte Seiten

Inhalt

Introduction
1
TRANSNATIONAL MIGRATION AND THE ISRAELI STATE IN FLUX NATIONALLEVEL PERSPECTIVES
29
Labor Migration Managing the EthnoNational Conflict and Client Politics in Israel
31
Litigating Citizenship Beyond the Law of Return
51
TEL AVIV AS GLOBAL CITY LOCAL AND MUNICIPAL PERSPECTIVES ON TRANSNATIONAL MIGRATION
71
Local Migrant Policies in a Guestworker Regime The Case of Tel Aviv
73
Migrant Workers Segregation and Adaptation to the Ethnic City The Case of Tel Aviv
87
IRREGULAR MIGRATION AND HEALTH
101
Asylum Seekers and Trafficked Women A Comparative Perspective on Health Care Entitlements
139
SEEKING INHABITABLE SPACES OF WELCOME ETHNOGRAPHIC PERSPECTIVES ON UNDOCUMENTED MIGRANTS EVERYDAY LIVES
157
Flesh of Our Flesh? Undocumented Migrant Workers Search for Meaning in the Wake of a Suicide Bombing
159
The Rise and Fall of African Migrant Churches Transformations in African Religious Discourse and Practice in Tel Aviv
185
Terms of Endearment Undocumented Domestic Workers and Their Israeli Employers
203
Challenging Exclusionary Migration Regimes Labor Migration in Israel in Comparative Perspective
217
References
233
Index
255

Rights Citizenship and the National State Health Policies toward Migrant Workers in Comparative Perspective
103
Undocumented Migrant Workers and Access to Health Services in Germany Points of Comparison to Israel
123
Contributor Biographies
265
Urheberrecht

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Seite 233 - European journal of Crime, Criminal Law, and Criminal Justice 10:7. Aleinikoff, T. Alexander, and Douglas B. Klusmeyer. 2002. Citizenship Policies for an Age of Migration. Washington, DC: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace: Migration Policy Institute. Alexander, Michael. 2003a. Host-Stranger Relations in Rome, Tel Aviv, Paris and Amsterdam: A comparison of local policies toward labor migrants. Unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of Amsterdam. . 2003b. Local Policies Toward Migrants as an...

Autoren-Profil (2007)

Sarah Willen is a research rellow in the NIMH (National Institute of Mental Health) Postdoctoral Training Program in Culture and Mental Health Services, Department of Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School.

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