"Migrant Women Transforming Citizenship" develops essential insights concerning the notion of transnational citizenship by means of the life stories of highly educated Turkish migrant women in Germany and Great Britain, interweaving and developing theories of citizenship, identity and hybridity with
External Voting: The Patterns and Drivers of Central European Migrants' Homeland Electoral Participation (Migration, Diasporas and Citizenship)
✍ Scribed by Kacper Szulecki, Marta Bivand Erdal, Ben Stanley
- Publisher
- Palgrave Macmillan
- Year
- 2022
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 125
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
This open access book is the first monograph that brings together insights from comparative politics, political sociology, and migration studies to introduce the current state of knowledge on external voting and transnational politics. Drawing on new data gathered within the DIASPOlitic project, which created a comparative dataset of external voting results for 6 countries of origin and 17 countries of residence as well as an extensive qualitative dataset of 80 in-depth interviews with four groups of migrants, this book not only illustrates theoretical problems with empirical material, but also provides answers to previously unaddressed questions.
The empirical material focuses on the European context. The Eastern Enlargement of the European Union (2004-2007) triggered a westward wave of migration from Central and Eastern European countries which faced the expansion of existing émigré communities and the emergence of new ones. As this process coincided with the expansion ofmigrant voting rights, the result is a large set of populous diaspora communities which can potentially have a significant impact on country electoral politics, making the study of external voting highly relevant.
This book’s introduction takes stock of current research on transnational politics and external voting, presenting core puzzles. The following chapter introduces the context of intra-European migration and the political situation in Central-Eastern European sending countries. The next two sections address the empirical puzzles, drawing on new quantitative and qualitative. The conclusion takes stock of the evidence gathered, discusses the normative problem of non-resident voters enfranchisement, connects external voting to the broader debate on political remittances and finally, maps the terrain ahead for future research.
This concise, empirically grounded introduction to external voting is critical reading in structuring the debate around migration and shapingresearch agendas for the future.
✦ Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Contents
About the Authors
List of Figures
Chapter 1: Introduction
Defining External Voting
Expansion of Emigrant Franchise
External Voting Landscape: Countries, Elections, Criteria, and Modalities
What Do We Know About External Voting? Migration Studies Meet Political Science
References
Chapter 2: Emigration and Transnational Political Practices in Central and Eastern Europe After EU Enlargement 2004–2007
East-West Migration in Europe: Political Context and Consequences
The DIASPOlitic Project, Data Gathering, and Methods
Data Gathering and Method: Quantitative Analysis of External Voting Results
Data Gathering and Method: Qualitative Study of Migrant Voting
References
Chapter 3: External Voting Patterns: CEE Migrants in Western Europe
The Political Contexts of the Countries of Origin
Bulgaria
Czechia
Latvia
Lithuania
Poland
Romania
Data and Methods
Results of the Analysis
Turnout Patterns and Change Over Time
Overall Disparity
Parliamentary Elections
Presidential Elections
Ideological Disparity
Pluralism
Populism
Economic Left-Right
GAL/TAN
LGBT Rights
Gender Equality
Equal Participation of Women
Reference to Religious Principles
Immigration
Cultural Superiority
Welfare
Clientelism
References
Chapter 4: Migrant Perspectives on External Voting
Making Sense of the Reasons Why Migrants Vote “Back Home”
Motivations for Voting in Country-of-Origin Elections
The Practical Possibility of Casting the Vote in Elections
Interacting Scales of Motivation for External Voting
Emigration, External Voting, and Political Engagement
Transnational Lifeworlds and Politics
How Does the Experience of Migration Influence Political Views?
Concluding Discussion
References
Chapter 5: Conclusions
What Have We Learned About External Voting? Discussion of Findings
Differences Between Diaspora Voting and “Homeland” Results
Ideological Differences
What Do We Know About Turnout?
Why Do Migrants Vote, or Not?
Legitimacy and Normative Considerations Surrounding External Voting
Do Migrants Desire to Be “Agents of Change”?
Research Frontiers and Future Knowledge Needs
Three Areas for Further Research: Empirical Knowledge Needs
Three Areas for Further Research: Normative Dimension
References
Index
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