Temporary Transnationals: Southeast Asian Students in Australia
Access status:
Open Access
Type
ArticleAbstract
Despite rapidly increasing global flows of international students, research to date has paid little heed to how students abroad identify and mobilise. Focusing on the experience of Indonesians, Malaysians and Singaporeans in Australia – a primary hub for international education – ...
See moreDespite rapidly increasing global flows of international students, research to date has paid little heed to how students abroad identify and mobilise. Focusing on the experience of Indonesians, Malaysians and Singaporeans in Australia – a primary hub for international education – we explore the ways in which our informants understand their place and potential as students. We find international students to comprise a distinct sort of diaspora. With their liminal status, these – for the most part – only temporary transnationals do internalise new norms and agency in a personal sense. However, they tend to identify increasingly as national citizens and to be disinclined to mobilise politically, at least during the course of their studies. These findings add to our understanding both of collective identity and action among students, and of the broader implications of globalisation and internationalisation for social and political activism.
See less
See moreDespite rapidly increasing global flows of international students, research to date has paid little heed to how students abroad identify and mobilise. Focusing on the experience of Indonesians, Malaysians and Singaporeans in Australia – a primary hub for international education – we explore the ways in which our informants understand their place and potential as students. We find international students to comprise a distinct sort of diaspora. With their liminal status, these – for the most part – only temporary transnationals do internalise new norms and agency in a personal sense. However, they tend to identify increasingly as national citizens and to be disinclined to mobilise politically, at least during the course of their studies. These findings add to our understanding both of collective identity and action among students, and of the broader implications of globalisation and internationalisation for social and political activism.
See less
Date
2011-01-01Publisher
Taylor & FrancisLicence
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis as: Meredith L. Weiss & Michele Ford (2011) Temporary Transnationals: Southeast Asian Students in Australia, Journal of Contemporary Asia, 41:2, 229-248, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00472336.2011.553042Citation
Meredith L. Weiss & Michele Ford (2011) Temporary Transnationals: Southeast Asian Students in Australia, Journal of Contemporary Asia, 41:2, 229-248Share