Beyond Money : Does Migration Experience Transfer Gender Norms? Empirical Evidence from Kerala, India

This paper examines the impact of return migration from Saudi Arabia and the Gulf on the transfer of gender norms to the Indian state of Kerala. Migration to countries in the Middle East has led to significant remittance flows and economic prosperi...

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Main Authors: Joseph, George, Wang, Qiao, Chellaraj, Gnanaraj, Tas, Emcet Oktay, Andres, Luis Alberto, Javaid, Syed Usman, Rajan, Irudaya
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/174061647271379501/Beyond-Money-Does-Migration-Experience-Transfer-Gender-Norms-Empirical-Evidence-from-Kerala-India
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37154
id okr-10986-37154
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-371542022-03-18T05:10:39Z Beyond Money : Does Migration Experience Transfer Gender Norms? Empirical Evidence from Kerala, India Joseph, George Wang, Qiao Chellaraj, Gnanaraj Tas, Emcet Oktay Andres, Luis Alberto Javaid, Syed Usman Rajan, Irudaya RETURN MIGRANT FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION IMPACT ON POVERTY REDUCTION IMPACT OF BRAIN DRAIN This paper examines the impact of return migration from Saudi Arabia and the Gulf on the transfer of gender norms to the Indian state of Kerala. Migration to countries in the Middle East has led to significant remittance flows and economic prosperity, although the effects on social norms and attitudes remain largely unexplored. The paper finds that returning migrants from Saudi Arabia tend to exhibit conservative values regarding gender-based violence and extreme attitudes pertaining to the perpetration of physical violence against women. Compared with those who have no migration experience, the attitudes of returning migrants from Saudi Arabia toward gender-based violence were more conservative by three standard deviations, while the attitudes of those returning from the Gulf were less conservative by 0.5 standard deviation. Similarly, compared with those with no migration experience, returning migrants from Saudi Arabia were more conservative by 2.6 standard deviations regarding extreme attitudes related to gender norms, such as sexual assault, while those returning from the Gulf were less conservative by 0.7 standard deviation. These results show that migration experience can have a substantial impact on the gender attitudes of returning migrants, with potential implications for migration and gender policies in Kerala and for countries that send a large share of temporary migrants overseas for work. 2022-03-17T17:38:54Z 2022-03-17T17:38:54Z 2022-03-14 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/174061647271379501/Beyond-Money-Does-Migration-Experience-Transfer-Gender-Norms-Empirical-Evidence-from-Kerala-India http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37154 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC: World Bank Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research South Asia India
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic RETURN MIGRANT
FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
IMPACT ON POVERTY REDUCTION
IMPACT OF BRAIN DRAIN
spellingShingle RETURN MIGRANT
FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
IMPACT ON POVERTY REDUCTION
IMPACT OF BRAIN DRAIN
Joseph, George
Wang, Qiao
Chellaraj, Gnanaraj
Tas, Emcet Oktay
Andres, Luis Alberto
Javaid, Syed Usman
Rajan, Irudaya
Beyond Money : Does Migration Experience Transfer Gender Norms? Empirical Evidence from Kerala, India
geographic_facet South Asia
India
description This paper examines the impact of return migration from Saudi Arabia and the Gulf on the transfer of gender norms to the Indian state of Kerala. Migration to countries in the Middle East has led to significant remittance flows and economic prosperity, although the effects on social norms and attitudes remain largely unexplored. The paper finds that returning migrants from Saudi Arabia tend to exhibit conservative values regarding gender-based violence and extreme attitudes pertaining to the perpetration of physical violence against women. Compared with those who have no migration experience, the attitudes of returning migrants from Saudi Arabia toward gender-based violence were more conservative by three standard deviations, while the attitudes of those returning from the Gulf were less conservative by 0.5 standard deviation. Similarly, compared with those with no migration experience, returning migrants from Saudi Arabia were more conservative by 2.6 standard deviations regarding extreme attitudes related to gender norms, such as sexual assault, while those returning from the Gulf were less conservative by 0.7 standard deviation. These results show that migration experience can have a substantial impact on the gender attitudes of returning migrants, with potential implications for migration and gender policies in Kerala and for countries that send a large share of temporary migrants overseas for work.
format Working Paper
author Joseph, George
Wang, Qiao
Chellaraj, Gnanaraj
Tas, Emcet Oktay
Andres, Luis Alberto
Javaid, Syed Usman
Rajan, Irudaya
author_facet Joseph, George
Wang, Qiao
Chellaraj, Gnanaraj
Tas, Emcet Oktay
Andres, Luis Alberto
Javaid, Syed Usman
Rajan, Irudaya
author_sort Joseph, George
title Beyond Money : Does Migration Experience Transfer Gender Norms? Empirical Evidence from Kerala, India
title_short Beyond Money : Does Migration Experience Transfer Gender Norms? Empirical Evidence from Kerala, India
title_full Beyond Money : Does Migration Experience Transfer Gender Norms? Empirical Evidence from Kerala, India
title_fullStr Beyond Money : Does Migration Experience Transfer Gender Norms? Empirical Evidence from Kerala, India
title_full_unstemmed Beyond Money : Does Migration Experience Transfer Gender Norms? Empirical Evidence from Kerala, India
title_sort beyond money : does migration experience transfer gender norms? empirical evidence from kerala, india
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2022
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/174061647271379501/Beyond-Money-Does-Migration-Experience-Transfer-Gender-Norms-Empirical-Evidence-from-Kerala-India
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37154
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