Migrants and their money are not all the same: Migration, remittances and family morality in rural South India Cover Image

Migrants and their money are not all the same: Migration, remittances and family morality in rural South India
Migrants and their money are not all the same: Migration, remittances and family morality in rural South India

Author(s): Ester Gallo
Subject(s): Politics / Political Sciences, Social Sciences, Economy, Geography, Regional studies
Published by: Transnational Press London
Keywords: migration; remittances; kinship; morality; Kerala

Summary/Abstract: The article analyses the relation between social remittances and migrant families through the perspective of migrant elites’ politics of identity in sending contexts. It argues for the importance of looking historically at how competing engage-ments with migration have led people to morally evaluate the suitability of remit-tances for kinship well-being. Migrant elites' conceptions of remittances are un-derpinned by a double meaning associated with ‘foreign money’, which is in turn highly influenced by local perceptions of different migrant destinations. On the one hand, money (as other goods) symbolizes loyalty towards the family and the community. On the other, money becomes the visible manifestation of distance between kin, and is locally judged insofar as it is not able to replace the lack of family care and affection. In the process, remittances emerge not only as a medi-um of family care, but also a social phenomenon through which the morality and possibility of kinship solidarity is questioned, if not invalidated.

  • Issue Year: 10/2013
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 33-46
  • Page Count: 14
  • Language: English