Lexington Books
Pages: 318
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-4637-8 • Hardback • August 2010 • $143.00 • (£110.00)
978-0-7391-4638-5 • Paperback • December 2011 • $58.99 • (£45.00)
978-0-7391-4639-2 • eBook • August 2010 • $56.00 • (£43.00)
John A. Arthur is professor of sociology at University of Minnesota.
Chapter 1: Constructing African Immigrant Identities in Transnational Domains
Chapter 2: Situating Africa's Brain Drain Dilemma in Global Migrations
Chapter 3: Transnational African Immigrant Lives and Identities
Chapter 4: Rationalizing the Meanings of African Migrations
Chapter 5: Gendering the Diaspora Identities of Second Generation African Immigrant Girls
Chapter 6: African Immigrants and Native-Born Blacks: Discourses on Finding Common Ground
Chapter 7: Imagining the Future of African Immigrant Identities in Migration Studies
African Diaspora Identities: Negotiating Culture in Transnational Migration is a fascinating and groundbreaking discussion of contemporary African migration as one of the major challenges faced by postcolonial African states. Beyond the old and tired argument of grinding poverty and deprivation as major factors in African migration, Arthur links this phenomenon to other factors, including the new global economic system and the easy transferability of the educational credentials of many educated African immigrants that have spurred them to become important players in the global migration process. Indeed, the book not only explodes the myth of African immigrants as dependents of the welfare state, but as highly educated, highly motivated and hard working individuals determined to earn their rightful and respectful place in the United States and elsewhere while also using the benefits of their new environment to improve the socio-economic conditions of their less priveleged family members back home. This is an absolute must-read for any student of migration.
— Joseph Takougang, University of Cincinnati
This well-researched and well-written book provides a penetrating analysis of the formation of African immigrant cultural identities in the United States. It is an indispensable and timely contribution to the literature on the African immigrant experience. An essential reading for anyone interested in gaining a thorough understanding of the cultural, social, and economic factors and contexts that shape the formation of immigrant cultural identities in a new society.
— Thomas Owusu, William Paterson University of New Jersey
Explaining complex identities and a variety of migration goals, grouped as "collective altruism," African Diaspora Identities demonstrates how Africans in a "transnationalized diaspora" develop their nations and change the image of Africa. In this study John Arthur turns traditional brain drain interpretations on their heads and brings a refreshingly new spin into the discussions and debates on the phenomenal late 20th and early 21st -centuries outflow of Africans and the repercussions for the continent, its peoples, and the host societies abroad.
— Violet Showers Johnson, Agnes Scott College and author of The Other Black Bostonians: West Indians in Boston
Using responses from more than 1,000 immigrants from a dozen African countries who now live in the US, Canada, and the UK, sociologist Arthur (Minnesota) reveals the interplay between global structures (e.g., capitalism's need for a mobile global labor surplus, colonial and postcolonial experiences, economic and political crises, and human rights atrocities) and the desires of African immigrants for economic opportunities in Western countries where their human capital resources enable them to contend for agency....Arthur's theoretical framework and methodology position him well relative to scholars such as Saskia Sassen (Guests and Aliens, 1999) and build on his substantial body of work on the African diaspora. Summing Up: Recommended
— Choice Reviews