We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
Expatriate
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
- Format:
-
28 January 2025

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Human Geography, Migration, immigration and emigration, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Emigration & Immigration, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General, Development and environmental geography, Sociology and anthropology
Winner of British Sociological Association Philip Abrams Memorial Prize 2024
‘By focussing on the trajectory of a social category so many of us take for granted, this book offers a creative, critical and provocative engagement with the discursive and postcolonial history of the ways we think about migration more generally. For anyone concerned about the ways migration and mobility have been, and continue to be, governed, imagined and experienced, this book is an essential read.’
Tariq Jazeel, University College London
‘Kunz’s delicate, scholarly tapestry of ethnography and Kenyan independence archives reveals how the category ‘expatriate’ is entangled in the shifting postcolonial power dynamics of migration and the murky politics of oil. A must read for migration scholars.’
Caroline Knowles, Queen Mary, University of London
‘Brilliant, insightful and often surprising, this book leverages the ever changing social category “expatriate” to explore the intersections of race, colonialism, management and migration. Scholarly work at its best.’
Bridget Anderson, University of Bristol
Introduction
1 Following the expatriate: theoretical and methodological starting points
Part I: The historical expatriate
2 From colonial civil servant to expatriate at the eve of Kenyan independence
3 Towards a new breed of expatriate manager in international business
4 Remaking the Shell expatriate: from company wife to global citizen
Part II: The expatriate today
5 Making international expats in Nairobi
6 Archiving the temporary expatriate
7 Studying expatriates: academic divisions of (skilled) labour
Conclusion
Index