Migrant Returns: Manila, Development, and Transnational Connectivity

migrantreturns.png

The government of the Philippines has for decades encouraged its citizens to seek work abroad and send money back to the country in remittances. But in recent years it has increasingly sought to entice Filipinos who have settled abroad to come home, not only for tourism but also for retirement. In Migrant Returns: Manila, Development, and Transnational Connectivity (Duke University Press, 2017), Eric J. Pido travels with Filipino Americans as they try to reimagine their lives and lifestyles in the gated communities and malls of Manila, and beyond. Along the way he encounters real estate agents, bureaucrats, investors and family members of returnees, or balikbayan, all in one way or another participating in attempts at selling an idea of home, one that for balikbayan from the US in particular evokes feelings both of homecoming and of a homeliness that they associate with their years spent on the other side of the Pacific.

Listen to the podcast here.

David Kennedy

Chicago-based website developer that loves Squarespace. Mediaspace.co

https://mediaspace.co
Previous
Previous

Call for Papers: 2nd International Conference on Burma/Myanmar Studies

Next
Next

Uncovering Indonesia’s Act of Killing