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  1. International Migration, Domestic Work, and Care Work: Undocumented Latina Migrants in Israel.Adriana Kemp, Silvina Schammah-Gesser & Rebeca Raijman - 2003 - Gender and Society 17 (5):727-749.
    This article discusses three major dilemmas embedded in women's labor migration by focusing on undocumented Latina migrants in Israel. The first is that to break the cycle of blocked mobility in their homelands, migrant women must take jobs that they would have never taken in their countries of origin, despite uncertainty about possible economic outcomes. The second dilemma is that the search for economic betterment leads Latina migrants to risk living and working illegally in the host country, forcing them to (...)
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  • From Russia with Love?: Newspaper Coverage of Cross-Border Prostitution in Northern Norway, 1990—2001.Dag Stenvoll - 2002 - European Journal of Women's Studies 9 (2):143-162.
    The article examines national news reports on prostitution of Russian women in northern Norway between 1990 and 2001. Applying critical discourse analysis, the author shows how this particular type of cross-border, rural prostitution is represented as sexual transaction, as a sociopolitical problem, and as a symbolic issue used to legitimize stricter border controls. Images of prostitutes, pimps and customers are also discussed. The different thematizations are in turn connected to various historical practices of state regulation of sexuality, to constructions of (...)
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  • Life below a `Language Threshold'?: Stories of Turkish Marriage Migrant Women in Denmark.Anika Liversage - 2009 - European Journal of Women's Studies 16 (3):229-247.
    In many immigrant groups, women gain less command of the host country language than the men. Using life story interviews with marriage migrants from Turkey, now living in Denmark, this article investigates this limited language learning, linking it to these women's lives as they primarily unfold in three social locations: households, workplaces and language schools. During their first years in Denmark a gendered division of work may relegate the women to the Turkish- or Kurdish-speaking home environment. When they subsequently enter (...)
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