Migrating for a Profession: Becoming a Caribbean nurse in post-WWII Britain

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    Abstract

    Youths from the Global South migrating for further education often face
    various forms of discrimination. This Caribbean case study discusses how
    conditions in the home country can provide a foundation for educational
    migration that helps the migrants overcome such obstacles and even develop
    a strong sense of agency and self-empowerment. In the post-WWII period,
    numerous Caribbean women trained in nursing at British hospitals that have
    been described as marred by race and gender related inequality and associated
    forms of exploitation. Yet, the nurses interviewed about this training
    emphasised its high quality and downplayed the problems encountered. This
    positive attitude, it is argued, must be understood in the light of the key
    ideological role of education, particularly for a profession, as an avenue of
    social and personal mobility in the late-colonial Caribbean societies and the
    ways in which it enabled these Caribbean women to stake out a new life for
    themselves.
    OriginalsprogEngelsk
    TidsskriftIdentities - Global Studies in Culture and Power
    Vol/bind22
    Udgave nummer3
    Sider (fra-til)258-272
    Antal sider15
    ISSN1070-289X
    DOI
    StatusUdgivet - 4 maj 2015

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