Transnationalism: The Study of Population Moves

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"As a theoretical construct about immigrant life and identity, transnationalism aptly suits the study of population movements in a world where improved modes of transport, as well as the images that are transmitted by means of modern telecommunications have shortened the social distance between sending and receiving countries."

An immigrant's ability to adapt to a different nation has become an easier task than it was before. Customs, practices, religions, political standings and cultures have blended in many nations to create an almost global civilization where media and communication through the internet are connecting people from across the world. Societies are no longer a closed entity, causing migrants to emody a hybrid of different cultures and customs which entail their origional ethnicity, as well as fragments of other societies which have influenced and transformed them.

Online social networking has changed the dynamics of a bound cultural society and transformed it into a multi-dymensional hybrid of social interraction between strangers, aquaintances and loved-ones by making the majority of the population of the world available to you from the comfort of your chair. This form of communication has had enormous effects on how we experience and handle social relations in our everyday interractions.

Media has always had the power to transform ideas through what it represents. Most of the media we experience today is part of a global message which we absorb into our everyday lives; our customs, cultural coding, religious views and political standings. Due to satellite televesion, nations everywhere are able to tune into the world on a larger scale putting each nation under a single umbrella of opinions and views e...

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...can Republic shared similar views that represented the Anglo culture, the Latino culture and the Miraflores culture, combined. "Resulting changes in religious ideas and practices in Boston were communicated back to Miraflores, as part and parcel of the constant exchanges of people, resources and remittences linking these communities." (Levitt 1998: 86)

Works Cited

International Air Transport Association (IATA), Fact Sheet: World Industry Statistics, www.iata.org.

Levitt, P. Local-Level Global Religion: The Case of U.S.-Dominican Migration. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, Vol 37, No 1. Taken from Blackwell Publishing and Society for the Scientific Study of Religion: www.jstor.org. 1998, pages 74 - 89.

Tarrow, S. 1998. Power in Movement: Social Movements and Contentious Politics. Second Edition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. page 4

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