Author, Subjects, Keywords

Cited Author

 

 
   » By Author or Editor
 » Browse Author by Alphabet
 » By Journal
 » By Subjects
 » Malaysian Journals
 » By Type
 » By Year
 » By Latest Additions
 
 
   » By Author
 » Top 20 Authors
 » Top 20 Article
 » Top Journal Cited
 » Top Article Cited
 » Journal Citation Statistics
 » Usage Since Sept 2007


 
 
 

Login | Create Account

Migrant networks of irregular Nayu workers in Malaysia – The case of the Tom Yum restaurants in Kuala Lumpur

Bunmak, Suttiporn , (2011) Migrant networks of irregular Nayu workers in Malaysia – The case of the Tom Yum restaurants in Kuala Lumpur. Geografia - Malaysian Journal of Society and Space , 7 (2). pp. 37-44. ISSN 2180-2491

[img]
Preview
PDF - Requires a PDF viewer such as GSview, Xpdf or Adobe Acrobat Reader
96Kb

Official URL: http://www.ukm.my/geografia

Affiliations

Thaksin University, Thailand

Abstract

The Nayu workers are unauthorised foreign workers from Thailand who may be found operating and serving at the many Thai Halal Tom Yum restaurants all over Malaysia. This paper examines how migrant networks form and develop among Nayu migrants, former migrants and non-migrants in Thailand and Malaysia using data from ethnographic fieldwork. It is shown that international migration has increased in current years and unauthorised Nayu worker flow has become more complex because of the role migrant networks play in shaping migration connections between Thailand and Malaysia. Since they go through their contacts without using a recruitment agency, these pioneering migrants constitute a very important source of information about the availability of job opportunities in Malaysia. Newly arrived migrants are also initially assisted and settled by the pioneer migrants. In conclusion, the findings contribute important insights into the connections between the labour demands of the Tom Yum restaurant business in Malaysia and the labour supply of Nayu workers in Thailand.

Item Type:Journal
Keywords:international migration, irregular Nayu worker, migration networks, migrant workers, Tom Yum restaurants
Subjects:H Social Sciences, Economics, Sociology
ID Code:12111

Brettell CB, Hollifield JF (2000) Introduction: Migration theory. In: Brettell CB, Hollifield JF (eds) Migration theory: Talking across disciplines, pp. 1-26. Routledge, New York.

Fetterman DM (1998) Ethnography: Step by step. Sage Puplications, Thousand Oaks California.

Goss J, Lindquist BA (1995) Conceptualising international labor migration: A structuration perspective. International Migration Review 29 (2), 317-351.

Granovetter MS (1973) The Strength of Weak Ties. The American Journal of Sociology 78 (6),1360-1380.

Gubrium JF, Holstein JA (1997) The new language of qualitative method. Oxford University Press, New York.

Gurak DT, Caces F (1992) Migration networks and the shaping of migration systems. In: Kritz M,Lim LL, Zlotnik H (eds) International migration systems a global approach, pp. 150-176.Clarendon Press, Oxford.

Hugo, G (1993). 'Indonesian Labour Migration to Malaysia: Trends and Policy Implications', Southeast Asian Journal of Social Science, 27(1), 36-72.

Hugo G (1995) International labour migration and the family: Some observations from Indonesia. Asian and Pacific Migration Journal 4 (2-3), 273-301.

Kitiarsa P (2006) Village transnationalism: Transborder identities among Thai-Islam migrant workers in Singapore. Working Paper No. 71. Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore.

Klanarong N (2003) Female international labour migration from Southern Thailand (PhD dissertation). Department of Geographical and Environmental Studies, University of Adelaide.

Lertrit S (1992) Extension of industry and its implication for the Way of Life of Thai-Muslim women in Pattani. Prince of Songkhla University, Pattani Campus, Pattani (in Thai).

Menji'var C (2000) Fragmented ties: Salvadoran immigrant networks in America. University of California Press, Berkeley.

Rudnick AM (2009) Working gendered boundaries: Temporary migration experiences of Bangladeshi women in Malaysia export industry from a multi-sited perspective (PhD dissertation). Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences, University of Amsterdam.

Wilson TD (1998) Weak ties, strong ties: Network principles in Mexican migration. Human Organization 57 (4), 394-403.

Repository Staff Only: item control page