One world is not enough: the structured phenomenology of lifestyle migrants in East Asia

The paper is based on original empirical research into the lifestyle migration of European migrants, primarily British, to Thailand and Malaysia, and of Hong Kong Chinese migrants to Mainland China. We combine strong structuration theory (SST) with Heideggerian phenomenology to develop a distinctive...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inThe British journal of sociology Vol. 70; no. 1; pp. 44 - 69
Main Authors Stones, Rob, Botterill, Kate, Lee, Maggy, O'Reilly, Karen
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Wiley Subscription Services, Inc 01.01.2019
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN0007-1315
1468-4446
1468-4446
DOI10.1111/1468-4446.12357

Cover

Abstract The paper is based on original empirical research into the lifestyle migration of European migrants, primarily British, to Thailand and Malaysia, and of Hong Kong Chinese migrants to Mainland China. We combine strong structuration theory (SST) with Heideggerian phenomenology to develop a distinctive approach to the interplay between social structures and the lived experience of migrants. The approach enables a rich engagement with the subjectivities of migrants, an engagement that is powerfully enhanced by close attention to how these inner lives are deeply interwoven with relevant structural contexts. The approach is presented as one that could be fruitfully adopted to explore parallel issues within all types of migration. As is intrinsic to lifestyle migration, commitment to a better quality of life is central to the East Asian migrants, but they seek an uncomplicated, physically enhanced texture of life, framed more by a phenomenology of prosaic well‐being than of self‐realization or transcendence. In spite of possessing economic and status privileges due to their relatively elite position within global structures the reality for a good number of the lifestyle migrants falls short of their prior expectations. They are subject to particular kinds of socio‐structural marginaliszation as a consequence of the character of their migration, and they find themselves relatively isolated and facing a distinct range of challenges. A comparison with research into various groups of migrants to the USA brings into relief the specificities of the socio‐structural positioning of the lifestyle migrants of the study. Those East Asian migrants who express the greatest sense of ease and contentment seem to be those who have responded creatively to the specific challenges of their socio‐structural situation. Often, this appears to have been achieved through understated but active involvements with their new settings and through sustaining focused transnational connections and relationships.
AbstractList The paper is based on original empirical research into the lifestyle migration of European migrants, primarily British, to Thailand and Malaysia, and of Hong Kong Chinese migrants to Mainland China. We combine strong structuration theory (SST) with Heideggerian phenomenology to develop a distinctive approach to the interplay between social structures and the lived experience of migrants. The approach enables a rich engagement with the subjectivities of migrants, an engagement that is powerfully enhanced by close attention to how these inner lives are deeply interwoven with relevant structural contexts. The approach is presented as one that could be fruitfully adopted to explore parallel issues within all types of migration. As is intrinsic to lifestyle migration, commitment to a better quality of life is central to the East Asian migrants, but they seek an uncomplicated, physically enhanced texture of life, framed more by a phenomenology of prosaic well-being than of self-realization or transcendence. In spite of possessing economic and status privileges due to their relatively elite position within global structures the reality for a good number of the lifestyle migrants falls short of their prior expectations. They are subject to particular kinds of socio-structural marginaliszation as a consequence of the character of their migration, and they find themselves relatively isolated and facing a distinct range of challenges. A comparison with research into various groups of migrants to the USA brings into relief the specificities of the socio-structural positioning of the lifestyle migrants of the study. Those East Asian migrants who express the greatest sense of ease and contentment seem to be those who have responded creatively to the specific challenges of their socio-structural situation. Often, this appears to have been achieved through understated but active involvements with their new settings and through sustaining focused transnational connections and relationships.
The paper is based on original empirical research into the lifestyle migration of European migrants, primarily British, to Thailand and Malaysia, and of Hong Kong Chinese migrants to Mainland China. We combine strong structuration theory (SST) with Heideggerian phenomenology to develop a distinctive approach to the interplay between social structures and the lived experience of migrants. The approach enables a rich engagement with the subjectivities of migrants, an engagement that is powerfully enhanced by close attention to how these inner lives are deeply interwoven with relevant structural contexts. The approach is presented as one that could be fruitfully adopted to explore parallel issues within all types of migration. As is intrinsic to lifestyle migration, commitment to a better quality of life is central to the East Asian migrants, but they seek an uncomplicated, physically enhanced texture of life, framed more by a phenomenology of prosaic well-being than of self-realization or transcendence. In spite of possessing economic and status privileges due to their relatively elite position within global structures the reality for a good number of the lifestyle migrants falls short of their prior expectations. They are subject to particular kinds of socio-structural marginaliszation as a consequence of the character of their migration, and they find themselves relatively isolated and facing a distinct range of challenges. A comparison with research into various groups of migrants to the USA brings into relief the specificities of the socio-structural positioning of the lifestyle migrants of the study. Those East Asian migrants who express the greatest sense of ease and contentment seem to be those who have responded creatively to the specific challenges of their socio-structural situation. Often, this appears to have been achieved through understated but active involvements with their new settings and through sustaining focused transnational connections and relationships.The paper is based on original empirical research into the lifestyle migration of European migrants, primarily British, to Thailand and Malaysia, and of Hong Kong Chinese migrants to Mainland China. We combine strong structuration theory (SST) with Heideggerian phenomenology to develop a distinctive approach to the interplay between social structures and the lived experience of migrants. The approach enables a rich engagement with the subjectivities of migrants, an engagement that is powerfully enhanced by close attention to how these inner lives are deeply interwoven with relevant structural contexts. The approach is presented as one that could be fruitfully adopted to explore parallel issues within all types of migration. As is intrinsic to lifestyle migration, commitment to a better quality of life is central to the East Asian migrants, but they seek an uncomplicated, physically enhanced texture of life, framed more by a phenomenology of prosaic well-being than of self-realization or transcendence. In spite of possessing economic and status privileges due to their relatively elite position within global structures the reality for a good number of the lifestyle migrants falls short of their prior expectations. They are subject to particular kinds of socio-structural marginaliszation as a consequence of the character of their migration, and they find themselves relatively isolated and facing a distinct range of challenges. A comparison with research into various groups of migrants to the USA brings into relief the specificities of the socio-structural positioning of the lifestyle migrants of the study. Those East Asian migrants who express the greatest sense of ease and contentment seem to be those who have responded creatively to the specific challenges of their socio-structural situation. Often, this appears to have been achieved through understated but active involvements with their new settings and through sustaining focused transnational connections and relationships.
Author Lee, Maggy
O'Reilly, Karen
Stones, Rob
Botterill, Kate
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: Rob
  orcidid: 0000-0003-0495-8622
  surname: Stones
  fullname: Stones, Rob
  email: R.Stones@westernsydney.edu.au
  organization: Western Sydney University
– sequence: 2
  givenname: Kate
  surname: Botterill
  fullname: Botterill, Kate
  organization: Edinburgh Napier University
– sequence: 3
  givenname: Maggy
  surname: Lee
  fullname: Lee, Maggy
  organization: University of Hong Kong
– sequence: 4
  givenname: Karen
  surname: O'Reilly
  fullname: O'Reilly, Karen
  organization: University of Loughborough
BackLink https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29479667$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed
BookMark eNqFkc9rHCEUx6UkNJu0596K0Esuk6ijjtNbEvKjIbCH5tCbuLPPXYOjW3UI-9_X7SY5BEoFEZ-fz-Ph9xgdhBgAoS-UnNG6zimXquGcyzPKWtF9QLO3ygGaEUK6hrZUHKHjnJ_qlTEhP6Ij1vOul7KboV_zAPg5Jr_ELuMQC4YQp9X6Oy5rwLmkaShTgiXerOvDWLePqy2OFntnIZetBzy6VTKhZOwCvja54IvszCd0aI3P8PnlPEGPN9ePV3fNw_z2x9XFQzNw2nYN74WyFoSRvCeDtUTZhZUWFooZBVIRRhmHTkhTy1IwObStXAzCWq5U37Un6HTfdpPi76kOpEeXB_DeBIhT1owQ1UoiCanot3foU5xSqMNpRjuiZF_BSn19oabFCEu9SW40aatfv6wCYg8MKeacwOrBFVNcDCUZ5zUleheN3gWhd0Hov9FU7_yd99r634bcG8_Ow_Z_uL68n__ci38Ajeqdmg
CitedBy_id crossref_primary_10_1111_emre_12490
crossref_primary_10_20525_ijrbs_v13i1_3031
crossref_primary_10_4054_DemRes_2023_48_9
crossref_primary_10_1177_1468794120977795
crossref_primary_10_1002_psp_2328
crossref_primary_10_1111_1468_4446_12724
crossref_primary_10_1111_ruso_12514
crossref_primary_10_1080_1369183X_2022_2116565
crossref_primary_10_1111_glob_12333
crossref_primary_10_1080_1369183X_2018_1521266
crossref_primary_10_1080_14036096_2024_2400178
crossref_primary_10_1111_johs_12310
crossref_primary_10_1080_17450101_2023_2209825
crossref_primary_10_1177_07255136221133187
crossref_primary_10_1007_s11024_024_09522_6
Cites_doi 10.1057/9781137328670_10
10.1057/9781137328670_7
10.4324/9780203130650
10.1007/978-0-230-21364-7
10.1080/17450101.2016.1221027
10.1002/psp.2011
10.1057/9781137328670_2
10.1177/0038038507074974
10.1080/17450101.2013.810403
10.7228/manchester/9780719082498.001.0001
10.1017/CBO9780511812507
10.1111/1468-4446.12074
10.1108/AAAJ-07-2016-2625
10.1080/1369183X.2010.489381
10.1080/13532940500492308
10.5040/9781472545282
10.1177/1440783317744447
10.1057/9781137328670
10.1111/1467-954X.12370
10.1007/978-1-349-24737-0
10.1111/j.1467-954X.2009.01864.x
10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.12.014
10.1007/978-1-137-26538-8
10.1515/9789888053933
10.1515/9780691228303
10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.12.034
10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.05.036
10.1017/CBO9780511734779
10.1093/migration/mnv015
ContentType Journal Article
Copyright London School of Economics and Political Science 2018
London School of Economics and Political Science 2018.
London School of Economics and Political Science 2019
Copyright_xml – notice: London School of Economics and Political Science 2018
– notice: London School of Economics and Political Science 2018.
– notice: London School of Economics and Political Science 2019
DBID AAYXX
CITATION
CGR
CUY
CVF
ECM
EIF
NPM
7U4
8BJ
BHHNA
DWI
FQK
JBE
WZK
7X8
DOI 10.1111/1468-4446.12357
DatabaseName CrossRef
Medline
MEDLINE
MEDLINE (Ovid)
MEDLINE
MEDLINE
PubMed
Sociological Abstracts (pre-2017)
International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
Sociological Abstracts
Sociological Abstracts
International Bibliography of the Social Sciences
International Bibliography of the Social Sciences
Sociological Abstracts (Ovid)
MEDLINE - Academic
DatabaseTitle CrossRef
MEDLINE
Medline Complete
MEDLINE with Full Text
PubMed
MEDLINE (Ovid)
Sociological Abstracts (pre-2017)
International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
Sociological Abstracts
MEDLINE - Academic
DatabaseTitleList MEDLINE

MEDLINE - Academic
Sociological Abstracts (pre-2017)
CrossRef
Database_xml – sequence: 1
  dbid: NPM
  name: PubMed
  url: https://proxy.k.utb.cz/login?url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=PubMed
  sourceTypes: Index Database
– sequence: 2
  dbid: EIF
  name: MEDLINE
  url: https://proxy.k.utb.cz/login?url=https://www.webofscience.com/wos/medline/basic-search
  sourceTypes: Index Database
DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Sociology & Social History
EISSN 1468-4446
EndPage 69
ExternalDocumentID 29479667
10_1111_1468_4446_12357
BJOS12357
Genre article
Journal Article
GeographicLocations England
Far East
East Asia
GeographicLocations_xml – name: England
– name: Far East
– name: East Asia
GrantInformation_xml – fundername: Research Grants Council, Hong Kong
  funderid: Ref. RES‐000–22‐4357
– fundername: Economic and Social Research Council
  funderid: Ref. ES/I023003/1
– fundername: Economic and Social Research Council
  grantid: Ref. ES/I023003/1
– fundername: Research Grants Council, Hong Kong
  grantid: Ref. RES-000-22-4357
GroupedDBID ---
-DZ
-ET
-~X
.3N
.GA
.Y3
05W
07C
0R~
10A
1OC
1OL
23N
31~
33P
3EH
3O-
3R3
4.4
50Y
50Z
51W
51Y
52M
52O
52Q
52S
52T
52U
52W
53G
5GY
5HH
5LA
5VS
66C
6J9
6P2
702
7PT
8-0
8-1
8-3
8-4
8-5
85S
8UM
930
9M8
A04
AABNI
AAESR
AAHQN
AAMMB
AAMNL
AANHP
AAONW
AAOUF
AASGY
AAXRX
AAYCA
AAYJJ
AAZKR
AAZSN
ABAWQ
ABBHK
ABCQN
ABCQX
ABCUV
ABEML
ABIVO
ABJNI
ABLJU
ABPPZ
ABPVW
ABSOO
ABXSQ
ACAHQ
ACBKW
ACBWZ
ACCZN
ACFBH
ACGFO
ACGFS
ACHJO
ACHQT
ACNCT
ACPOU
ACRPL
ACSCC
ACXQS
ACYXJ
ADBBV
ADEMA
ADEOM
ADIZJ
ADKYN
ADMGS
ADMHG
ADNMO
ADULT
ADXAS
ADZJE
ADZMN
AEFGJ
AEGXH
AEIGN
AEIMD
AETEA
AEUPB
AEUYR
AEYWJ
AFBPY
AFDVO
AFEBI
AFFNX
AFFPM
AFGKR
AFKFF
AFWVQ
AFZJQ
AGHNM
AGQPQ
AGTJU
AGXDD
AHBTC
AIAGR
AIDQK
AIDYY
AIURR
AJUXI
ALAGY
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
ALUQN
ALVPJ
AMBMR
AMYDB
APXXL
ASPBG
ASTYK
AVWKF
AZBYB
AZFZN
AZVAB
BAFTC
BDRZF
BFHJK
BKOMP
BMXJE
BNVMJ
BQESF
BROTX
BRXPI
BY8
C2-
CAG
COF
CS3
D-C
D-D
DCZOG
DPXWK
DR2
DRFUL
DRSSH
DU5
EBC
EBD
EBS
EJD
ESI
F00
F01
F5P
FEDTE
FXEWX
G-S
G.N
G50
GODZA
HF~
HGD
HGLYW
HVGLF
HZI
HZ~
H~9
IHE
IPSME
IX1
J0M
JAAYA
JAC
JBMMH
JBZCM
JENOY
JHFFW
JKQEH
JLEZI
JLXEF
JPL
JST
K48
L7B
LATKE
LC2
LC4
LEEKS
LH4
LITHE
LOXES
LP6
LP7
LUTES
LW6
LYRES
M4Z
MEWTI
MK4
MRFUL
MRSSH
MSFUL
MSSSH
MVM
MXFUL
MXSSH
N04
N06
N9A
NF~
NHB
O66
OIG
P2P
P2W
P2Y
P4C
PQQKQ
Q.N
Q11
QB0
R.K
ROL
RX1
SA0
SUPJJ
TAE
TN5
TWZ
U5U
UB1
UBC
ULY
UPT
W8V
W99
WBKPD
WH7
WIH
WII
WMRSR
WOHZO
WQZ
WSUWO
WXSBR
XG1
XKC
XOL
XSW
YXE
YYQ
YZZ
ZCG
ZHY
ZXP
ZZTAW
~45
~IA
~WP
AAYXX
CITATION
CGR
CUY
CVF
ECM
EIF
NPM
7U4
8BJ
BHHNA
DWI
FQK
JBE
WZK
7X8
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-c4137-4958ffe5a6490cff08fbf6feb82a8e6802124e756abf66526c336bc5ff488973
IEDL.DBID DR2
ISSN 0007-1315
1468-4446
IngestDate Fri Jul 11 04:53:26 EDT 2025
Fri Jul 25 22:24:46 EDT 2025
Mon Jul 21 05:55:01 EDT 2025
Wed Sep 10 06:00:16 EDT 2025
Thu Apr 24 22:54:55 EDT 2025
Wed Aug 20 07:24:08 EDT 2025
IsDoiOpenAccess false
IsOpenAccess true
IsPeerReviewed true
IsScholarly true
Issue 1
Keywords phenomenology
strong structuration theory
East Asia
transnationalism
international migration
Lifestyle migration
Language English
License http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor
London School of Economics and Political Science 2018.
LinkModel DirectLink
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c4137-4958ffe5a6490cff08fbf6feb82a8e6802124e756abf66526c336bc5ff488973
Notes ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 14
content type line 23
ORCID 0000-0003-0495-8622
OpenAccessLink http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/1038690
PMID 29479667
PQID 2170869360
PQPubID 41111
PageCount 26
ParticipantIDs proquest_miscellaneous_2008360600
proquest_journals_2170869360
pubmed_primary_29479667
crossref_citationtrail_10_1111_1468_4446_12357
crossref_primary_10_1111_1468_4446_12357
wiley_primary_10_1111_1468_4446_12357_BJOS12357
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate January 2019
2019-01-00
2019-Jan
20190101
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2019-01-01
PublicationDate_xml – month: 01
  year: 2019
  text: January 2019
PublicationDecade 2010
PublicationPlace England
PublicationPlace_xml – name: England
– name: London
PublicationTitle The British journal of sociology
PublicationTitleAlternate Br J Sociol
PublicationYear 2019
Publisher Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
Publisher_xml – name: Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
References 2010; 36
2012
2011
2006; 11
2017; 23
1998
2009
2008
2007
2013; 93
1996
2005
1993
2004
2003
1991
2013; 8
2014; 65
1977
2016; 11
2016; 4
2017; 53
2009; 57
2000
2016; 64
1985
2018
1984
1962
1983
2015
2014
2007; 41
2016; 29
2010; 70
2014; 104
e_1_2_9_10_1
Heidegger M. (e_1_2_9_26_1) 1962
e_1_2_9_12_1
Scannell P. (e_1_2_9_43_1) 1996
Mulhall S. (e_1_2_9_35_1) 1996
Stones R. (e_1_2_9_50_1) 2018
Castles S. (e_1_2_9_15_1) 2003
e_1_2_9_14_1
e_1_2_9_39_1
e_1_2_9_16_1
e_1_2_9_37_1
Dreyfus H.L. (e_1_2_9_18_1) 1993
Miller D. (e_1_2_9_32_1) 2008
e_1_2_9_41_1
e_1_2_9_20_1
e_1_2_9_22_1
e_1_2_9_45_1
e_1_2_9_24_1
e_1_2_9_8_1
Bellah R. (e_1_2_9_3_1) 1985
e_1_2_9_6_1
e_1_2_9_4_1
Bauman Z. (e_1_2_9_2_1) 1998
Ma E.K.W. (e_1_2_9_30_1) 2012
e_1_2_9_49_1
e_1_2_9_47_1
e_1_2_9_51_1
e_1_2_9_11_1
Morawska E. (e_1_2_9_34_1) 2011
Rabikowska M. (e_1_2_9_40_1) 2009
Korpela M. (e_1_2_9_28_1) 2009
O'Reilly K. (e_1_2_9_36_1) 2000
Dreyfus H.L. (e_1_2_9_17_1) 1991
e_1_2_9_38_1
Bourdieu P. (e_1_2_9_13_1) 1984
Morawska E. (e_1_2_9_33_1) 1996
Martin P.L. (e_1_2_9_31_1) 2004
e_1_2_9_42_1
e_1_2_9_46_1
e_1_2_9_23_1
e_1_2_9_44_1
e_1_2_9_7_1
Hoey B. (e_1_2_9_27_1) 2009
e_1_2_9_5_1
Glaser B.G. (e_1_2_9_21_1) 2008
e_1_2_9_9_1
e_1_2_9_25_1
e_1_2_9_48_1
Fechter A.‐M. (e_1_2_9_19_1) 2007
e_1_2_9_29_1
References_xml – year: 1985
– year: 2011
– volume: 8
  start-page: 313
  issue: 3
  year: 2013
  end-page: 30
  article-title: Postcoloniality and Privilege in New Lifestyle Flows: The Case of North Americans in Panama
  publication-title: Mobilities
– year: 2009
– year: 1983
– volume: 53
  issue: 4
  year: 2017
  article-title: Sociology's Unspoken Weakness: Bringing Epistemology Back In
  publication-title: Journal of Sociology
– year: 1962
– volume: 29
  issue: 7
  year: 2016
  article-title: Special Issue on Strong Structuration Theory
  publication-title: Accounting, Auditing and Accountability Journal
– start-page: 31
  year: 2009
  end-page: 50
– start-page: 139
  year: 2014
  end-page: 59
– year: 2005
– volume: 11
  start-page: 63
  issue: 1
  year: 2006
  end-page: 77
  article-title: Community, Belonging and Intimate Ethnicity
  publication-title: Modern Italy
– volume: 57
  start-page: 608
  issue: 4
  year: 2009
  end-page: 25
  article-title: Migration and the Search for a Better Way of Life: a Critical Exploration of Lifestyle Migration
  publication-title: The Sociological Review
– volume: 104
  start-page: 210
  year: 2014
  end-page: 19
  article-title: Choose and Book: A Sociological Analysis of Resistance to an Expert System
  publication-title: Social Science and Medicine
– year: 2007
– volume: 64
  start-page: 407
  issue: 3
  year: 2016
  end-page: 23
  article-title: Toward a Critical Sociology of Lifestyle Migration: Reconceptualising Migration and the Search for a Better Way of Life
  publication-title: The Sociological Review
– year: 2003
– year: 1996
– year: 2000
– volume: 23
  start-page: e2011
  year: 2017
  article-title: Discordant Lifestyle Mobilities in East Asia: Privilege and Precarity of British Retirement in Thailand
  publication-title: Population, Space and Place
– volume: 4
  start-page: 20
  issue: 1
  year: 2016
  end-page: 37
  article-title: From Lifestyle Migration to Lifestyle in Migration: Categories, Concepts and Ways of Thinking
  publication-title: Migration Studies
– volume: 36
  start-page: 1565
  issue: 10
  year: 2010
  end-page: 86
  article-title: Understanding Global Migration: A Social Transformtion Perspective
  publication-title: Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
– volume: 11
  start-page: 509
  issue: 4
  year: 2016
  end-page: 20
  article-title: Lifestyle Mobility in China: Context, Perspective and Prospects
  publication-title: Mobilities
– year: 1977
– year: 2018
– year: 2014
– year: 1998
– year: 2012
– year: 1984
– start-page: 15
  year: 2009
  end-page: 30
– year: 2008
– year: 2004
– volume: 93
  start-page: 86
  year: 2013
  end-page: 94
  article-title: What Matters to Older People with Assisted Living Needs? A Phenomenological Analysis of the Use and Non‐Use of Telehealth and Telecare
  publication-title: Social Science and Medicine
– volume: 41
  start-page: 277
  issue: 2
  year: 2007
  end-page: 93
  article-title: Intra‐European Migration and the Mobility–Enclosure Dialectic
  publication-title: Sociology
– volume: 65
  start-page: 293
  issue: 2
  year: 2014
  end-page: 316
  article-title: Social Theory and Current Affairs: A Framework for Greater Intellectual Engagement
  publication-title: British Journal of Sociology
– volume: 70
  start-page: 1285
  issue: 9
  year: 2010
  end-page: 94
  article-title: Theorising Big IT Programmes in Healthcare: Strong Structuration Theory Meets Actor Network Theory
  publication-title: Social Science and Medicine
– year: 1991
– year: 1993
– start-page: 27
  year: 2014
  end-page: 46
– year: 2015
– ident: e_1_2_9_39_1
  doi: 10.1057/9781137328670_10
– volume-title: The British on the Costa del Sol
  year: 2000
  ident: e_1_2_9_36_1
– ident: e_1_2_9_25_1
  doi: 10.1057/9781137328670_7
– ident: e_1_2_9_41_1
  doi: 10.4324/9780203130650
– ident: e_1_2_9_45_1
  doi: 10.1007/978-0-230-21364-7
– volume-title: Controlling Immigration: A Global Perspective
  year: 2004
  ident: e_1_2_9_31_1
– ident: e_1_2_9_51_1
  doi: 10.1080/17450101.2016.1221027
– ident: e_1_2_9_11_1
  doi: 10.1002/psp.2011
– volume-title: Heidegger and Being and Time
  year: 1996
  ident: e_1_2_9_35_1
– ident: e_1_2_9_29_1
  doi: 10.1057/9781137328670_2
– ident: e_1_2_9_37_1
  doi: 10.1177/0038038507074974
– ident: e_1_2_9_5_1
  doi: 10.1080/17450101.2013.810403
– ident: e_1_2_9_4_1
  doi: 10.7228/manchester/9780719082498.001.0001
– ident: e_1_2_9_46_1
– ident: e_1_2_9_12_1
  doi: 10.1017/CBO9780511812507
– ident: e_1_2_9_47_1
  doi: 10.1111/1468-4446.12074
– ident: e_1_2_9_16_1
  doi: 10.1108/AAAJ-07-2016-2625
– volume-title: Transnational Lives: Expatriates in Indonesia
  year: 2007
  ident: e_1_2_9_19_1
– volume-title: Habits of the Heart: Individualism and Commitment in American Life
  year: 1985
  ident: e_1_2_9_3_1
– ident: e_1_2_9_14_1
  doi: 10.1080/1369183X.2010.489381
– ident: e_1_2_9_20_1
  doi: 10.1080/13532940500492308
– volume-title: Radio, Television and Modern Life
  year: 1996
  ident: e_1_2_9_43_1
– volume-title: Being‐in‐the World: A Commentary on Heidegger's Being and Time, Cambridge
  year: 1991
  ident: e_1_2_9_17_1
– ident: e_1_2_9_48_1
  doi: 10.5040/9781472545282
– start-page: 31
  volume-title: Lifestyle Migration: Expectations, Aspirations and Experiences
  year: 2009
  ident: e_1_2_9_27_1
– ident: e_1_2_9_7_1
– ident: e_1_2_9_49_1
  doi: 10.1177/1440783317744447
– volume-title: The Cambridge Handbook of Social Theory
  year: 2018
  ident: e_1_2_9_50_1
– ident: e_1_2_9_9_1
  doi: 10.1057/9781137328670
– ident: e_1_2_9_10_1
  doi: 10.1111/1467-954X.12370
– ident: e_1_2_9_44_1
  doi: 10.1007/978-1-349-24737-0
– ident: e_1_2_9_6_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1467-954X.2009.01864.x
– ident: e_1_2_9_23_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.12.014
– ident: e_1_2_9_38_1
  doi: 10.1007/978-1-137-26538-8
– start-page: 15
  volume-title: Lifestyle Migration: Expectations, Aspirations and Experiences
  year: 2009
  ident: e_1_2_9_28_1
– volume-title: A Sociology of Immigration: [Re]Making Multifaceted America
  year: 2011
  ident: e_1_2_9_34_1
– volume-title: Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste
  year: 1984
  ident: e_1_2_9_13_1
– volume-title: Being and Time
  year: 1962
  ident: e_1_2_9_26_1
– volume-title: Globalization: The Human Consequences
  year: 1998
  ident: e_1_2_9_2_1
– volume-title: The Age of Migration
  year: 2003
  ident: e_1_2_9_15_1
– volume-title: Desiring Hong Kong, Consuming South China: Transborder Cultural Politics 1970–2010
  year: 2012
  ident: e_1_2_9_30_1
  doi: 10.1515/9789888053933
– volume-title: Polish Migration to the UK in the ‘New’ European Union: After 2004
  year: 2009
  ident: e_1_2_9_40_1
– volume-title: Bourdieu: Critical Perspectives
  year: 1993
  ident: e_1_2_9_18_1
– volume-title: The Discovery of Grounded Theory: Strategies for Qualitative Research
  year: 2008
  ident: e_1_2_9_21_1
– volume-title: Insecure Prosperity: Small‐Town Jews in Industrial America 1890–1940
  year: 1996
  ident: e_1_2_9_33_1
  doi: 10.1515/9780691228303
– volume-title: The Comfort of Things
  year: 2008
  ident: e_1_2_9_32_1
– ident: e_1_2_9_22_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.12.034
– ident: e_1_2_9_24_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.05.036
– ident: e_1_2_9_42_1
  doi: 10.1017/CBO9780511734779
– ident: e_1_2_9_8_1
  doi: 10.1093/migration/mnv015
SSID ssj0002256
Score 2.3393185
Snippet The paper is based on original empirical research into the lifestyle migration of European migrants, primarily British, to Thailand and Malaysia, and of Hong...
SourceID proquest
pubmed
crossref
wiley
SourceType Aggregation Database
Index Database
Enrichment Source
Publisher
StartPage 44
SubjectTerms Acculturation
Anthropology, Cultural
Cultural Characteristics
East Asia
England
Far East
Female
Humans
Internal migration
international migration
Interviews as Topic
Life Style
Lifestyle migration
Lifestyles
Male
Migrants
Migration
Phenomenology
Quality of Life
Residence Characteristics
Self-actualization
Social Environment
Social Isolation
Sociological Factors
strong structuration theory
Structuration
Texture
Transcendence
Transients and Migrants - psychology
Transnationalism
Title One world is not enough: the structured phenomenology of lifestyle migrants in East Asia
URI https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111%2F1468-4446.12357
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29479667
https://www.proquest.com/docview/2170869360
https://www.proquest.com/docview/2008360600
Volume 70
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwpV1LT9wwELYqTlx4tYUFWg1ShbhkyctO0tuWLkJIBYlSiVtkJzZELFlEdg_013fGTsKjQghxixLbcTye-Jtkvs-MfYtpkvhB6UkTYoAiuPZUEhYk48pDKQM_U8R3_nUijv7Exxe8yyYkLozTh-g_uJFn2Pc1ObhUzSMnt5yhGKOZIdE9iU8eRILU83-ePQhIYUeEA8CJF0QBb8V9KJfnWf2n69J_YPMpdrWLz-EyU123Xc7J9XA-U8Pi7zNFx3c91wpbaqEpjNxcWmUfdL3GNntGC-yC4_KCkxa5_8guTmsNVnMVqgbq6QxI8fXy6jsgrAQnTTu_0yVQIhlJPbiGpgYmlcHnvp9ouKku7ygXB6oaxrKZwaip5Cd2fjg-Pzjy2q0avAJXwcTDMCs1RnMp4swvjPFTo4wwWqWhTLVISUg-1gkXEk8LHooiioQquDH4AsmS6DNbqKe13mAgslJoqXhSpiY2UaCkr2LFS6LAojGLARt2dsqLVsacdtOY5F04QwOY0wDmdgAHbK-vcOsUPF4uut0ZPm9duckxZsOwL4uEP2A7_WV0QvqzIms9nTd2L08sgOBxwNbdhOnvFWZxgjElNr5vzf5aJ_Ifx6e_7dHmm2tssUUEdJn7RLTNFtDO-guCppn6av3iH9guCJc
linkProvider Wiley-Blackwell
linkToHtml http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwpV1Lb9QwEB6V9gAXoDy3tMVICHHJNi87CbfSh5bShwSLtLfIduwSsWRRs3sov54ZOxv6EEKIW5T4PR77G2fmM8DrlCZJGFWBtDEaKIKbQGWxJhpXHksZhYWieOeTUzH6kh5N-ORKLIznh-gP3Egz3HpNCk4H0le03AUNpWjODCneM7sDa1hVSAbY_qffFFLYFOEhcBZEScQ7eh_y5rlRwPWd6RbcvI5e3fZz-AD0suHe6-TbcDFXQ_3zBqfj__XsIdzv0Cnb9dNpHVZM8wg2-qAW9ob5cF7m2UUuH8PkrDHM0a6yumXNbM6I9PX86zuGyJJ5dtrFhakY-ZIR24MvaGbZtLbY8cupYd_r8wtyx2F1ww5kO2e7bS2fwPjwYLw3CrrbGgKNG2EWoKWVW2u4FGkRamvD3CorrFF5LHMjcuKST03GhcTXgsdCJ4lQmluLa0iRJU9htZk15jkwUVTCSMWzKrepTSIlQ5UqXlEULEpTD2C4FFSpOyZzulBjWi4tGhrAkgawdAM4gLd9hh-exOPPSTeXki87bW5LNNvQ8isSEQ7gVf8Z9ZB-rsjGzBatu84TEyB-HMAzP2P6uuIizdCsxMJ3nNz_1ojy_dHZZ_e08c85XsLd0fjkuDz-cPrxBdxDfFf4E6NNWEWZmy3EUHO17ZTkF3wLDLY
linkToPdf http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwpV3dT9UwFD9RTIwvovh1AbUmxviy6z7abuMNlRsEBaOY8La0WwsLl13C7n2Av55z2m0Kxhjj27K1XdvT0_5Oe86vAK85DZIwqgJlYzRQpDCBTuOSaFxFrFQU5prinb_sye0ffOdQ9N6EFAvj-SGGDTfSDDdfk4KfVfYXJXcxQxytmTGFe6a34Q6XiCcIF337ySCFNZEeAadBlESiY_chZ54bBVxfmH5Dm9fBq1t9Jsug-3p7p5OT8WKux-XlDUrH_2rYA7jfYVO26QfTQ7hlmhVYHUJa2Bvmg3mZ5xa5eASH-41hjnSV1S1rZnNGlK9HxxsMcSXz3LSLc1Mx8iQjrgdf0MyyaW2x3RdTw07ro3NyxmF1w7ZUO2ebba0ew8Fk6-DDdtDd1RCUuAymAdpZmbVGKMnzsLQ2zKy20hqdxSozMiMmeW5SIRW-liKWZZJIXQprcQbJ0-QJLDWzxjwDJvNKGqVFWmWW2yTSKtRci4piYFGY5QjGvZyKsuMxp-s0pkVvz1AHFtSBhevAEbwdMpx5Co8_J13vBV90utwWaLSh3ZcnMhzBq-EzaiEdrajGzBatu8wTEyB6HMFTP2CGf8U5T9GoxMLfObH_rRLF-5397-5p9Z9zvIS7Xz9Ois-f9nbX4B6Cu9xvF63DEorcPEcANdcvnIpcATm6C2U
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=One+world+is+not+enough%3A+the+structured+phenomenology+of+lifestyle+migrants+in+East+Asia&rft.jtitle=The+British+journal+of+sociology&rft.au=Stones%2C+Rob&rft.au=Botterill%2C+Kate&rft.au=Lee%2C+Maggy&rft.au=O%27Reilly%2C+Karen&rft.date=2019-01-01&rft.issn=0007-1315&rft.eissn=1468-4446&rft.volume=70&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=44&rft.epage=69&rft_id=info:doi/10.1111%2F1468-4446.12357&rft.externalDBID=n%2Fa&rft.externalDocID=10_1111_1468_4446_12357
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=0007-1315&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=0007-1315&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=0007-1315&client=summon