Acknowledgements
List of Contributors
Introduction Martina Boese
PART 1 Theories and Methodologies in Migration Research
Chapter 1 Understanding Global Migration and Diversity: A Case Study of South Korea
Stephen Castles
Chapter 2 Multiculturalism and Feminism: Women and the Burden of Representation
Georgina Tsolidis
Chapter 3 New Australian Ways of Knowing ‘Multiculturalism’ in a Period of Rapid Social Change: When Ibn Khaldun Engages Southern Theory.
Andrew Jakubowicz
PART 2 Migration, Settlement and the State
Chapter 4 Australia’s New Guest-Workers: Opportunity or Exploitation?
Jock Collins
Chapter 5 Theorising Migrant Work Beyond Economic Multiculturalism and Methodological Nationalism
Martina Boese
Chapter 6 Producing Knowledge about Refugee Settlement in Australia
Klaus Neumann and Sandy Gifford
PART 3 Race, Racism and Post-Nationalism
Chapter 7 (Not) Doing Race: ‘Casual Racism’, ‘Bystander Antiracism’ and ‘Ordinariness’ in Australian Racism Studies
Alana Lentin
Chapter 8 "It’s the end of the world as we know it…and I feel fine": Considering a Postnational World
Farida Fozdar
Chapter 9 ‘Race’ and the Lived Experiences of Australians of Sudanese Background
Karen Farquharson, Timothy Marjoribanks and David Nolan
PART 4 Cosmopolitanism and Transnationalism
Chapter 10 Australian Migrant Families and the Transnationalisation of Care
Loretta Baldassar
Chapter 11 Capitalism and Cosmopolitanism: A Very Australian Juxtaposition
Val Colic-Peisker
Chapter 12 Public Spaces in the Context of the Networked Citizen and M
Vince Marotta is a Senior Lecturer in Sociology at Deakin University and Coordinator of Publishing and Mentorship at the Alfred Deakin Research Institute for Citizenship and Globalisation.
Martina Boese is a Lecturer in Sociology at La Trobe University.
In this volume, Boese and Marotta bring together some of the finest scholars in the areas of migration, 'race', and multiculturalism. Their contributions were written against the backdrop of global upheaval which feeds the politics of exclusion and challenges the way cultures and communities coexist. As such, this book is an essential primer for all wishing to understand the present and the future of human sociability in our changing times.Zlatko Skrbis, Interim Deputy Vice-Chancellor and Vice-President (Education), Monash University, Australia
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