Repressive autonomy Discourses on and surveillance of marriage migration from Turkey to Austria Cover Image

Repressive autonomy Discourses on and surveillance of marriage migration from Turkey to Austria
Repressive autonomy Discourses on and surveillance of marriage migration from Turkey to Austria

Author(s): Sabine Strasser
Subject(s): Politics / Political Sciences, Social Sciences, Economy, Gender Studies, Geography, Regional studies, Sociology, Family and social welfare, Nationalism Studies, Sociology of Culture, Migration Studies, Ethnic Minorities Studies
Published by: Transnational Press London
Keywords: forced marriage; sham marriages; autonomy; Austria; Turkish minorities;

Summary/Abstract: Transnational marriages and family reunification have recently been assessed as two of the main obstacles to integration in Austria. They have been increasingly problematized and kept under surveillance when partners from third countries – in Austria, particularly from Turkey – have been involved. Nonetheless, a great number of Turkish migrants and their descendants prefer to marry partners from their “country of origin”. In this paper I discuss practices of and discourses on family formation across borders, based on ethnographic fieldwork in a small town in Austria. My findings show that transnational marriages in Austria are often conflated with forced and fictitious marriages and consequently rejected as fraudulent or “violence in the name of tradition”. Furthermore, legal provisions against problematic marriages do not liberate women but repress their autonomy.

  • Issue Year: 11/2014
  • Issue No: 3
  • Page Range: 316-328
  • Page Count: 13
  • Language: English