不稳定的乡村世界主义:爱尔兰小镇中的全球化、移民与多样性协商

Precarious rural cosmopolitanism: Negotiating globalization, migration and diversity in Irish small towns

Journal of Rural Studies · 2018
被引 162 · 同刊同年前 4%
ABS 3

中文导读

研究了爱尔兰两个小镇中移民与本地居民的互动,提出乡村世界主义概念,并指出这种世界主义因经济和政治趋势而具有不稳定性。

Abstract

The intensification of global mobility has introduced international migration to rural areas and small towns with little or no significant recent history of immigration. Drawing on an emergent literature in rural studies, this paper seeks to consolidate the concept of ‘rural cosmopolitanism’ both as a political or ethical project, and in relation to the ‘actual-existing cosmopolitanism’ of inter-cultural mobility, conviviality and openness to difference in rural communities. The framework is then tested through case studies of two rural small towns in Ireland – Gort, which was home to over 1000 Brazilian migrants in a population of less than 3000 in the late 2000s; and Ballyhaunis, Ireland's most diverse town with 42 different nationalities in a population of around 2300 – to examine the dynamics and relationships that have brought migrants to these towns and shaped their engagement with long-term residents. The paper contends that the emergent cosmopolitanism in the towns is defined by precarity, experienced at different scales from the individual to the community, and informed by broader economic and political trends. The paper argues that the rural context of the towns can serve both to facilitate cosmopolitan relations and to extenuate the precarity of this emerging cosmopolitanism.

乡村研究移民研究全球化多样性爱尔兰