Provider: - Institution: - Data provided by Europeana Collections- Anne Katrine has to renew her residence permit in Japan.- Original language summary:
Anne Katrine skal hen og have fornyet sin ...tilladelse til at opholde sig i Japan.- All metadata published by Europeana are available free of restriction under the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication. However, Europeana requests that you actively acknowledge and give attribution to all metadata sources including Europeana
RésuméLes demandes de séjour pour raison médicale des malades étrangers sont soumises pour avis aux médecins inspecteurs de santé publique. L’article rapporte l’évolution quantitative et qualitative ...de ces demandes dans un département d’Île-de-France.Ces demandes ont considérablement augmenté, passant de 152 en 1999 à 1 823 en 2003. Les demandeurs étaient majoritairement des femmes et des personnes originaires d’Afrique sub-saharienne. L’infection à VIH était le motif le plus fréquent des demandes même si son importance relative a diminué au cours du temps, passant de 25 % en 1999 à 15 % en 2003, suivie du diabète (8 % des demandeurs), de l’hypertension artérielle (5 %) et de la tuberculose (4 %). L’avis a été favorable au séjour dans 74 % des cas. L’analyse des autorisations de séjour pour raison médicale est un angle d’approche permettant d’appréhender la santé des étrangers en situation irrégulière.
Offering appropriate care to refugees requires temporal and structural resources, specific competence in diversity and cross-cultural issues and expertise in the fields of psychosocial and ...socio-medical assessment and treatment. In our experience, the absence of appropriate structures within such care often leads to a delay in identifying mentally ill or traumatised victims of torture in particular; such a delay has medical, psychological and social consequences for the individuals affected as well as for their families.
This chapter analyzes the family reunification process of Bangladeshi migrant men in Italy. It illustrates how men’s identity models and masculinity patterns are being challenged and are undergoing ...changes. Men’s perspectives are the focus for an analysis of the changes happening in family relationships set in the migratory and reunification context.
Using data collected through deep narrative interviews and participant observation, I analyze the social (re)definition of masculinity; how Bangladeshi migrants reuniting their family in Italy are (re)producing practices and identities; what kind of mutations happen in men’s authority, forms of “protection” and their “sense of honour” in order to protect/control family members and to satisfy their needs.
During migration, which is usually accompanied by family reunification, migrants live through processes of constant rearrangement of family normative relationships between genders and generations (Suarez Orozco Carola et al. Family process, 4(41), 625–643, 2002); Parreñas, R.S. (2005). Children of global migration. Transnational families and gendered woes. Palo Alto: Stanford University Press; Yeoh et al. (Global Networks, 5(4), 307–315, 2005). These processes affect the self-perception, the way of being and feeling in the new family and social context. New family practices, decisions and expectations also modify gender identities and the manner in which migrant men renegotiate their identification with hegemonic masculinity (Connell, R.W. (1995). Masculinities. Sydney: Allen & Unwin.).
This chapter explores the existential and embodied experience of border(ing) by focusing on the trials and tribulations of Abdelkrim, a young Moroccan man in his late 20s. Abdelkrim’s biography ...offers insights into the structural constraints, which produce lives suspended in the borderland. His slippage into ‘illegality’ testifies to the extent to which becoming an ‘illegal alien’ in Italy can be the result both of the migration policies rhetorically legitimized in the name of legality and, equally, of the system of exploitation that marks Italy’s underground economy. In a period of financial crisis and neoliberal economic policies, these dynamics push migrants to the margins of citizenship, while their legal limbo becomes increasingly permanent and uncertain. At the same time, within the ‘grey areas’ of exclusion, new modes of political subjectivity and collective agency emerge. By joining the protests on Imbonati Street, Abdelkrim and the activists reverse the securitarian argument about the need for security and legality, and invite us to rethink the EurAfrican border regimes in the light of the illegalization of migration. In doing so, they make visible the institutional processes of inclusion and exclusion through which certain types of human beings and power relations are brought into being.
How migration policies affect family mobility and relationships is a new and emerging area of study within transnational family literature. This chapter contributes to this literature by providing an ...in-depth examination of Ghanaian migrant mothers’ encounters with Dutch family migration policies and the impacts such policies have on their pathways to family reunion and the consequences for family relationships. The data come from qualitative research with 32 female Ghanaian migrants in The Netherlands. Adopting a gender-sensitive approach, our study shows discrepancies between the normative frameworks that underlie formal conditions to family reunion and female migrants’ family lives. Moreover, it shows that restrictive migration policies constrain women’s flexibility, a key aspect of Ghanaian family life, and shape dependencies and inequalities within families.