ABSTRACT
The article attempts to explore the impacts of ‘social remittances’ on the economic activities of households belonging to labour migrants who migrate from a village of Bangladesh to Malaysia on temporary contractual basis. It reveals that there has been a clear difference of social remittance impacts on the economic activities between the first-cycle migrants and the repeat-cycle migrants. The economic activities of first-cycle migrants are not impacted by social remittances while the economic activities of repeat-cycle migrants are limitedly impacted. In understanding the dynamics of social remittance impacts, the article applies a conceptual framework of ‘social remittances’ explained by Peggy Levitt and rationalises it through migration governance of Malaysia and some factors, directly and indirectly related to migration governance, and other factors. The study conducts in-depth interviews on 20 first-cycle and repeat-cycle migrants who were from Madhupur Village of Bangladesh in 2011 and revisited the village in 2018.
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Munshi Israil Hossain
Munshi Israil Hossain has done PhD from the university of Queensland. He is an associate professor of sociology at the university of Rajshahi. His areas of interest focus on migration and povery, dmigration and development, migration governance, political economy of migration, rural and urban livelihoods.