Cross-border Migration and Gender Boundaries in Central Eastern Europe – Female Perspectives
Cross-border Migration and Gender Boundaries in Central Eastern Europe – Female Perspectives
Author(s): Ágnes Erőss, Monika Mária Váradi, Doris Wastl-WalterSubject(s): Gender Studies, Migration Studies, Asylum, Refugees, Migration as Policy-fields
Published by: Transnational Press London
Keywords: cross-border migration; gender roles; gender boundaries; Central Eastern Europe; dual-earner model;
Summary/Abstract: In post-Socialist countries, cross-border labour migration has become a common individual and family livelihood strategy. The paper is based on the analysis of semi-structured interviews conducted with two ethnic Hungarian women whose lives have been significantly reshaped by cross-border migration. Focusing on the interplay of gender and cross-border migration, our aim is to reveal how gender roles and boundaries are reinforced and repositioned by labour migration in the post-socialist context where both the socialist dual-earner model and conventional ideas of family and gender roles simultaneously prevail. We found that cross-border migration challenged these women to pursue diverse strategies to balance their roles of breadwinner, wife, and mother responsible for reproductive work. Nevertheless, the boundaries between female and male work or status were neither discursively nor in practice transgressed. Thus, the effect of cross-border migration on altering gender boundaries in post-socialist peripheries is limited.
Journal: Migration Letters
- Issue Year: 17/2020
- Issue No: 4
- Page Range: 499-509
- Page Count: 11
- Language: English