ABSTRACT

While decisions for working overseas are often based on expectations and promises of better jobs, opportunities, economic gains and, eventually, a better future, such assumptions may not always be realized. Focusing on the question of why migrants, despite not realizing their earlier aspirations, continue to remain as migrants rather than return home, this book provides a unified understanding of the rationalization of the migration decision making. It does so by empirically situating the study in the experiences of Bangladeshi migrant workers in Hong Kong and Malaysia.

part I|78 pages

Setting the Scene

part II|41 pages

The Migration Process

part III|34 pages

Rationalizing Post-Migration Decisions

chapter 7|31 pages

The Dynamics of Income and Remittance

chapter 8|12 pages

Rationalization and the Implications