Diasporas and Migrations
MTA
Asian Communities Abroad, Labor, and Transnational Networks
2nd Edition
*Diasporas and Migrations* provides a comprehensive historical and thematic analysis of Asian mobility, tracing the movement of Chinese, Indian, Korean, and Southeast Asian communities from early maritime trade routes to contemporary digital networks. The book frames migration not merely as a shift from "tradition" to "modernity," but as a series of layered infrastructures—including imperial labor regimes, wartime displacements, and professional circulation—that have consistently knit together distant geographies through the flow of people, capital, and ideas.
Central to the text is the role of labor and institutional resilience. The book examines the transition from nineteenth-century coerced labor and the "coolie" trade to modern contract labor systems like the Gulf’s *kafala* and the global demand for female care workers. Despite the structural inequalities of these regimes, migrants have historically built robust self-help institutions—such as clan associations, religious temples, and informal credit networks like *qiaopi* and *hawala*—to navigate legal exclusion and economic precariousness in host societies.
The book also explores the "transnational" nature of these communities, emphasizing that migration is rarely a clean break from the homeland. Through a detailed study of remittances, the text illustrates how migrant earnings sustain household survival and local development in Asia, while also creating complex dependencies. Furthermore, it analyzes how political loyalties, religious practices, and media consumption transcend borders, allowing diaspora members to participate in the social and political life of their home countries while simultaneously fighting for citizenship and belonging in their new environments.
In its concluding chapters, the book addresses contemporary transformations, including the rise of "digital diasporas" and the looming impact of climate change on future mobility. It argues that the concept of "home" has become a fluid, multi-sited construct for millions of people. Ultimately, the work asserts that diaspora is not a temporary condition of transition, but a constitutive feature of the globalized world, where membership and identity are increasingly defined by participation in far-reaching transnational networks.
This book is intended for students, academics, and researchers in the fields of sociology, migration studies, and Asian history who seek a comprehensive understanding of transnational networks. It is also a valuable resource for policymakers and NGO advocates working on labor rights, immigration law, and global development. General readers interested in the social and economic forces that shape global Asian communities will find its blend of historical and contemporary analysis highly accessible.
January 11, 2026
66,844 words
4 hours 41 minutes
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