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Transnationalism and Identity: The Dream of ‘Better life’ for Egyptian Migrants in the UAE

In the modern globalized world, there has been a shift in migration studies that now focus on those immigrants from a transnational perspective. Thus, their lives are not detached from the transnational space that is not only about the point of departure and the point of arrival, but it is more rela...

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Main Author: Ellawaty, Aliaa
Format: Thesis
Published: AUC Knowledge Fountain 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Ellawaty, Aliaa
author_browse Ellawaty, Aliaa
author_facet Ellawaty, Aliaa
author_sort Ellawaty, Aliaa
collection Thesis
description In the modern globalized world, there has been a shift in migration studies that now focus on those immigrants from a transnational perspective. Thus, their lives are not detached from the transnational space that is not only about the point of departure and the point of arrival, but it is more related to the interconnections that emerge in the transnational space. This means that individuals are no longer tied to ethnic and cultural diversities, but by the transformations in the sociality of the transnational space. For many years, the United Arab Emirates has been a great attraction for middle-class Egyptians who wanted to challenge the possibilities offered by their migration to the Gulf. For them, UAE presents a place where financial prosperity and political stability exist. Thus, their migration is mostly attached to their dream of the “better life”. However, in the modern globalization, these dreams are marketized for capital profits that suit the global imaginary. In the transnational space, and through the sociality that is reproduced in multiple and diverse places, identity has turned into a making of nation-states that tend to control moving bodies. Hence, through monitoring the transformations in their everyday lives, these migrants’ identities are transformed according to the interrelated connectivity with a globalized capital. Therefore, the migrants’ dream of the “better life” is contested through the tensions of the everyday these transnational households encounter to underpin the contradiction between their lives transnationally and their expectations of social and economic wellness. To understand the development of the middle-class Egyptian migration, it is necessary to unpack how these migrants’ experiences are not only framed within a material structure, but also within “imaginative geographies” (Said, 1987). Hence, it is important to look at how the figure of the transnational migrant is tied to technologies of expulsion from the social order which fix them in the position of the “outsider” or the “other” (Nail, 2015). However, in a world of hyper mobility, the migrant in the new global order is not tied to a “geographical space”. Instead, virtual connections and abstract globalization give a fluid understanding of the interconnectivities (re)produced in the transnational space (Roderiguiz, 2010). This notion allows an exploration of the social identities that are reworked away from the nation-state imaginary, but those that are understood through the everyday experiences of those migrants. Therefore, a new concept of the transnational migrant emerges whose social identity is shaped by transformative and deterritorialized globalized space (Schiller, 1995:48-49). Hence, the transnational identity is explored through the individualistic everyday experiences with all its complexities in the transnational space.
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institution American University in Cairo (Egypt)
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
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spelling oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-2720 Transnationalism and Identity: The Dream of ‘Better life’ for Egyptian Migrants in the UAE Ellawaty, Aliaa In the modern globalized world, there has been a shift in migration studies that now focus on those immigrants from a transnational perspective. Thus, their lives are not detached from the transnational space that is not only about the point of departure and the point of arrival, but it is more related to the interconnections that emerge in the transnational space. This means that individuals are no longer tied to ethnic and cultural diversities, but by the transformations in the sociality of the transnational space. For many years, the United Arab Emirates has been a great attraction for middle-class Egyptians who wanted to challenge the possibilities offered by their migration to the Gulf. For them, UAE presents a place where financial prosperity and political stability exist. Thus, their migration is mostly attached to their dream of the “better life”. However, in the modern globalization, these dreams are marketized for capital profits that suit the global imaginary. In the transnational space, and through the sociality that is reproduced in multiple and diverse places, identity has turned into a making of nation-states that tend to control moving bodies. Hence, through monitoring the transformations in their everyday lives, these migrants’ identities are transformed according to the interrelated connectivity with a globalized capital. Therefore, the migrants’ dream of the “better life” is contested through the tensions of the everyday these transnational households encounter to underpin the contradiction between their lives transnationally and their expectations of social and economic wellness. To understand the development of the middle-class Egyptian migration, it is necessary to unpack how these migrants’ experiences are not only framed within a material structure, but also within “imaginative geographies” (Said, 1987). Hence, it is important to look at how the figure of the transnational migrant is tied to technologies of expulsion from the social order which fix them in the position of the “outsider” or the “other” (Nail, 2015). However, in a world of hyper mobility, the migrant in the new global order is not tied to a “geographical space”. Instead, virtual connections and abstract globalization give a fluid understanding of the interconnectivities (re)produced in the transnational space (Roderiguiz, 2010). This notion allows an exploration of the social identities that are reworked away from the nation-state imaginary, but those that are understood through the everyday experiences of those migrants. Therefore, a new concept of the transnational migrant emerges whose social identity is shaped by transformative and deterritorialized globalized space (Schiller, 1995:48-49). Hence, the transnational identity is explored through the individualistic everyday experiences with all its complexities in the transnational space. 2022-02-01T08:00:00Z thesis application/pdf https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/1689 https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/2720/viewcontent/Full_Thesis___Aliaa800170031.pdf Theses and Dissertations AUC Knowledge Fountain Better-life Transnationalism deterritorialized global transformative experiences home identity diversity nation-state possibilities tensions households. Anthropology Arts and Humanities Other Anthropology Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration Social and Behavioral Sciences
spellingShingle Better-life
Transnationalism
deterritorialized
global
transformative
experiences
home
identity
diversity
nation-state
possibilities
tensions
households.
Anthropology
Arts and Humanities
Other Anthropology
Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Ellawaty, Aliaa
Transnationalism and Identity: The Dream of ‘Better life’ for Egyptian Migrants in the UAE
title Transnationalism and Identity: The Dream of ‘Better life’ for Egyptian Migrants in the UAE
title_full Transnationalism and Identity: The Dream of ‘Better life’ for Egyptian Migrants in the UAE
title_fullStr Transnationalism and Identity: The Dream of ‘Better life’ for Egyptian Migrants in the UAE
title_full_unstemmed Transnationalism and Identity: The Dream of ‘Better life’ for Egyptian Migrants in the UAE
title_short Transnationalism and Identity: The Dream of ‘Better life’ for Egyptian Migrants in the UAE
title_sort transnationalism and identity the dream of better life for egyptian migrants in the uae
topic Better-life
Transnationalism
deterritorialized
global
transformative
experiences
home
identity
diversity
nation-state
possibilities
tensions
households.
Anthropology
Arts and Humanities
Other Anthropology
Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration
Social and Behavioral Sciences
url https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/1689
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/2720/viewcontent/Full_Thesis___Aliaa800170031.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT ellawatyaliaa transnationalismandidentitythedreamofbetterlifeforegyptianmigrantsintheuae