Kapitel
Lizenziert
Nicht lizenziert
Erfordert eine Authentifizierung
8 Migration Intermediaries and the Migration of Health Professionals from the Global South
-
Abel Chikanda
Sie haben derzeit keinen Zugang zu diesem Inhalt.
Sie haben derzeit keinen Zugang zu diesem Inhalt.
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Tables and Figures ix
- Acknowledgments xi
- Introduction. Global Migration, Gender, and Health Professional Credentials: Transnational Value Transfers and Losses 1
-
SECTION 1 Health Worker Migration and Global Value Transfer: New Approaches and Challenges
- 1 The Study of Global Value Chains: Bringing Services and People In 29
- 2 Circulation of Love: Care Transactions in the Global Health Care Market of Transnational Medical Travel 49
-
SECTION 2 Conceptualizing Workplace Integration and Stratification: Immigration Policy, International Credentials, and Intersectional Disadvantage
- 3 The Migration of Health Professionals to Canada: Reducing Brain Waste and Improving Labour Market Integration 69
- 4 Global Migration and Key Issues in Workforce Integration of Skilled Health Workers 95
- 5 Gendering Integration Pathways: Migrating Health Professionals to Canada 109
- 6 The Global Intimate Workforce 126
-
SECTION 3 Transnational Health Mobilities: Networks, Regulation, and Intermediaries
- 7 Networking through Kafala: Skilled Workers and Transnational Networks in the Governance of Health Care Migration in the Gulf 143
- 8 Migration Intermediaries and the Migration of Health Professionals from the Global South 167
- 9 The Ethical Recruitment of Internationally Educated Nurses? An Examination of the Devaluing of Nursing in the Philippines, a Sending Region 187
-
SECTION 4 Domestic Policies in Receiving Countries: Value Transfer, Integration, and Regulation
- 10 Recognition of Professional Qualifications of Foreign-Born Nurses: Gender, Migration, and Geographic Valuations of Skill 209
- 11 Ten Years of Ontario’s Fair-Access Law: Has Access to Regulated Professions Improved for Internationally Educated Individuals? 230
- 12 The Changing Face of Australian Aged Care: A Precarious Dependence? 246
- 13 Care Worker Migration and Robotics in Japan’s Aged Care Sector 263
-
SECTION 5 Recasting Brain Drain and Global Circulation
- 14 Nursing the Nation: The Intellectual Labour of Early Migrant Nurses in the US, 1935–1965 287
- 15 From Brain Drain to Brain Retrain: A Case of Nigerian Nurses in Canada 307
- 16 Peripatetic Physicians: Rewriting the South African Brain Drain Narrative 326
- 17 Recasting the “Brain” in “Brain Drain”: A Case Study from Medical Migration 347
- Contributors 365
- Index 371
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Tables and Figures ix
- Acknowledgments xi
- Introduction. Global Migration, Gender, and Health Professional Credentials: Transnational Value Transfers and Losses 1
-
SECTION 1 Health Worker Migration and Global Value Transfer: New Approaches and Challenges
- 1 The Study of Global Value Chains: Bringing Services and People In 29
- 2 Circulation of Love: Care Transactions in the Global Health Care Market of Transnational Medical Travel 49
-
SECTION 2 Conceptualizing Workplace Integration and Stratification: Immigration Policy, International Credentials, and Intersectional Disadvantage
- 3 The Migration of Health Professionals to Canada: Reducing Brain Waste and Improving Labour Market Integration 69
- 4 Global Migration and Key Issues in Workforce Integration of Skilled Health Workers 95
- 5 Gendering Integration Pathways: Migrating Health Professionals to Canada 109
- 6 The Global Intimate Workforce 126
-
SECTION 3 Transnational Health Mobilities: Networks, Regulation, and Intermediaries
- 7 Networking through Kafala: Skilled Workers and Transnational Networks in the Governance of Health Care Migration in the Gulf 143
- 8 Migration Intermediaries and the Migration of Health Professionals from the Global South 167
- 9 The Ethical Recruitment of Internationally Educated Nurses? An Examination of the Devaluing of Nursing in the Philippines, a Sending Region 187
-
SECTION 4 Domestic Policies in Receiving Countries: Value Transfer, Integration, and Regulation
- 10 Recognition of Professional Qualifications of Foreign-Born Nurses: Gender, Migration, and Geographic Valuations of Skill 209
- 11 Ten Years of Ontario’s Fair-Access Law: Has Access to Regulated Professions Improved for Internationally Educated Individuals? 230
- 12 The Changing Face of Australian Aged Care: A Precarious Dependence? 246
- 13 Care Worker Migration and Robotics in Japan’s Aged Care Sector 263
-
SECTION 5 Recasting Brain Drain and Global Circulation
- 14 Nursing the Nation: The Intellectual Labour of Early Migrant Nurses in the US, 1935–1965 287
- 15 From Brain Drain to Brain Retrain: A Case of Nigerian Nurses in Canada 307
- 16 Peripatetic Physicians: Rewriting the South African Brain Drain Narrative 326
- 17 Recasting the “Brain” in “Brain Drain”: A Case Study from Medical Migration 347
- Contributors 365
- Index 371