Seeking Haven and Seeking Jobs: Migrant Workers' Networks in Two Thai Locales

Thailand has seen a large increase in migrant workers from Myanmar since the 1990s. A constant flow of migrants arrive to seek refuge from dire circumstances in their homeland and/or to seek better work opportunities. They have adapted to changing state policy regarding their migrant status and work...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inSoutheast Asian Studies Vol. 2; no. 2; pp. 243 - 283
Main Authors Rabibhadana, Nobpaon, Hayami, Yoko
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Kyoto Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University 01.08.2013
Center for Southeast Asian Studies
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Summary:Thailand has seen a large increase in migrant workers from Myanmar since the 1990s. A constant flow of migrants arrive to seek refuge from dire circumstances in their homeland and/or to seek better work opportunities. They have adapted to changing state policy regarding their migrant status and work permits as well as to more immediate means of control. Previous works on this subject have tended either toward macro-level policy and economics, or more journalistic accounts of individual migrant experiences. Little attention has been paid to differences in the migrant processes and networks formed across the border and within the country.In this paper two locales, one on the border (Mae Sot) and one in the interior (Samut Songkhram), are compared based on interviews conducted with migrant workers on their mode of arrival, living and working conditions, migrant status and control, and how they form networks and relations within and across the border. By comparing the two locales, rather than emphasize how the state and geopolitical space define mobility we argue that transnational migrant workers formulate and define their space through adaptive networks in articulation with geopolitical factors as well as local socioeconomic and historical-cultural dynamics. The dynamics among macro policies, micro-level agency of migrants, and meso-level networks define each locale.
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ISSN:2186-7275
2423-8686
DOI:10.20495/seas.2.2_243