48 research outputs found

    Navigating a river by its bends. A study on transnational social networks as resources for the transformation of Cambodia

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    This article explores in what ways first generation Cambodian French and Cambodian American returnees create and employ the social capital available in their transnational social networks upon their return to Cambodia. The triangular interdependence between the returnees, their overseas immigrant communities and homeland society is taken as a starting point. The central argument is that Cambodian French and Cambodian American returnees build different relationships to Cambodia due to: (1) the influence of their immigrant communities in the countries of resettlement; and (2) the contexts of their exit from Cambodia. Regarding debates on the contribution of returnees to an emergent nation, findings in this multisited casestudy bring forward that ideas of return held by the three parties involved may force remigrants into transnationalism in both host and home countries. Findings also demonstrate that social capital may be seen as a resource or a restraint in the lives of returnees

    Resisting Birth Control, the Philippines Grows Crowded

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    AIDS-Infected Prostitutes Serving Philippine Base

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    Names List Leads to Ethics Debate

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    Mines Maim the Ultimate Civilians: Animals

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    An Anesthetist, Cardiac Arrest, and Inquiry

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    When Is an Abortion Not an Abortion?

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    A Doctor Seeking Solace in an Endless Line of Patients

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    Surrogate Denied Custody of Child

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    HE's Not Hairy, He's My Brother

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