ABSTRACT

Since restrictions on commonwealth labour immigration to Britain in the 1960s, marriage has been the dominant form of migration between Pakistan and the UK. Most transnational Pakistani marriages are between cousins or other more distant relatives, lending a particular texture to this transnational social field. Based on research in Britain and Pakistan, this book provides a rounded portrayal incorporating the emotional motivations for, and content of, these transnational unions.

The book explores the experiences of families and individuals involved, including the neglected experiences of migrant husbands, and charts the management of the risks of contracting transnational marriages, as well as examining the consequences in cases when marriages run into conflict. Equally, however, the book explores the attractions of marrying ‘back home’, and the role of transnational marriage in maintaining bonds between people and places. Marriage emerges as a crucial, but dynamic and contested, element of Pakistani transnational connections.

This book is of interest to students and scholars in the fields of migration studies, kinship/the family and South Asian studies, as well as social work, family law and immigration.

chapter |24 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|23 pages

Weddings

chapter 2|13 pages

British Pakistanis and transnationalism

chapter 3|25 pages

Zarurat rishta

Making and maintaining connections

chapter 4|28 pages

Close kin marriage

Reducing and reproducing risk

chapter 5|20 pages

Married but not married

The divisibility of weddings and the protection of women

chapter 6|23 pages

Conflicting interests

Rifts, concealment, izzat and emotion

chapter 7|26 pages

Migrant mangeters

Masculinity, marriage and migration

chapter 8|7 pages

Gender, emotion and balancing the picture