ID | 131805 |
Title Proper | Dreams of middle class |
Other Title Information | consumption, life-course and migration Between Bangladesh and Portugal |
Language | ENG |
Author | Mapril, Jose |
Publication | 2014. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | In the past 20 years, Bangladeshi migration to Southern European countries has gained an increasing importance. Portugal is no exception, and today more than 4,500 Bangladeshis live in the country. One of the more interesting facets of this population, though, is their educational and economic profile. They come from what has been roughly summed up as the 'new' Bangladeshi 'middle classes'. Their families are both rural and urban, have properties, and own businesses. Other members of their domestic units work in NGOs, and private and state owned companies. Simultaneously, they have considerable educational backgrounds, with college and university degrees, and most are fluent in English. But what was their motivation to come to Europe in the first place? And what does this tell us about the young Bangladeshi middle class? For these young Bangladeshi adults, it is through geographic mobility that one can earn enough economic capital to access the 'modern' and to progress in the life-course. By remaining in Bangladesh, their access to middle class status and adulthood is not guaranteed and thus migrating to Europe is seen as a possible avenue for achieving such dreams and expectations. The main argument in this paper is that migration-as a resource and a discoursive formation-is itself constitutive of this 'middle class'. |
`In' analytical Note | Modern Asian Studies Vol. 48, No.3; May 2014: p.693-719 |
Journal Source | Modern Asian Studies Vol. 48, No.3; May 2014: p.693-719 |
Key Words | Bangladesh ; Portugal ; Middle Class ; Population ; Migration |