Transnationalism Reloaded: The Historical Trajectory of a Concept
Date issued
June 5, 2017
In
Ethnic and Racial Studies
Vol
9
No
40
From page
1474
To page
1485
Reviewed by peer
1
Subjects
migration studies transnationalism ethnic and racial studies
Abstract
In this commentary, I discuss the importance of Portes, Guarnizo and Landolt’s article, focusing on three specific points. First, I argue that this 1999 article represented a turning point in transnational migration studies, in that it made it possible to address important weaknesses in this field of study. Second, I reflect on the article’s lack of reference to the nation-state and its power to shape transnational fields. Third, I argue that the cumulative knowledge gained over the last two decades – triggered in part by the claims of this 1999 article – have been steadily integrated into this field of investigation, rendering possible important theoretical alterations. These insights have made possible a shift towards a new stance, a transnational perspective whose specific epistemology makes it possible to develop explanatory frameworks for current transformation processes and to revise social theory more generally.
Publication type
journal article
