000 02518cam a2200217 i 4500
999 _c38239
_d38239
020 _a9781138320048 (hardback)
041 _aeng.
082 0 0 _a332.04246095493
_bWIT-S
100 1 _aWithers, Matt
_eauthor.
245 1 0 _aSri Lanka's remittance economy :
_ba multiscalar analysis of migration-underdevelopment /
_cMatt Withers.
260 _aUK :
_bRoutledge,
_c2019.
300 _a180p.
_billustrations (black and white) ;
500 _aIncludes index.
504 _aInclude index.
505 0 _aIntroduction -- The history of migration-development -- The political economy of uneven development and in Sri Lanka -- In search of the "good life": uneven development and forced migration -- The cost of being exploited: fees, debts and the merchants of labour -- Manufacturing success: status and the re-socialisation of migrant labour -- Remittances and the financing of uneven development -- The unequal "wins" of temporary labour migration -- Conclusion: migration-underdevelopment.
520 _aEmploying a multiscalar approach to migration outcomes, spanning individual households, local communities, the macroeconomy and global patterns of capital accumulation, this book demonstrates how cumulatively causal processes at structural, institutional and agency levels have forged a precariously remittance-dependent economy in Sri Lanka. This book combines historical-structural analysis with qualitative research to contend that remittance inflows have reinforced patterns of uneven development in Sri Lanka. At the heart of this argument is a bold critique of remittance capital that inverts the migration–development nexus which has come to dominate international policymaking, with implications for Sri Lanka and other ‘remittance economies’ throughout the Global South. The author contends that temporary labour migration from Sri Lanka is a process of ‘migration-underdevelopment’, in which remittance inflows – ubiquitously considered a key source of capital for developing economies – are reinforcing of uneven development at multiple scales and produce unsustainable development outcomes. Offering a uniquely systematic critique of remittances as a source of developmental capital for countries of origin, such as Sri Lanka, this book will be of interest to academics in the field of development studies, migration studies and Asian studies.
546 _aEnglish.
650 0 _aEconomic development
_zSri Lanka.
650 0 _aEmigrant remittances
_zSri Lanka.
942 _2ddc
_cBK