1st Edition

Migrant Health Professionals and the Global Labour Market The Dreams and Traps of Nepali Nurses

By Radha Adhikari Copyright 2020
192 Pages
by Routledge

192 Pages
by Routledge

192 Pages
by Routledge

This book offers a fresh perspective on gender debates in Nepal and analyses how the international migration of the first generation of professional female Nepali nurses has been a catalyst for social change. With unprecedented access to study participants in Nepal (the source country), following them and their networks in the UK (the destination country), this ethnographic study explores... Read more

Introduction: Nursing, gender, and the political economy of female migration in Nepal

1 Professional nursing education and the labour market situation in contemporary Nepal

2 The international migration market economy: decision-making, planning, and preparation

3 Arriving and surviving in the UK: navigating a new set of professional challenges

4 ‘There is a vast difference from what I had thought’: professional life in the UK

5 Negotiating with new realities: family and social lives in the UK

6 Concluding discussion: professional nursing in Nepal and nurse migration to the UK

Biography

Radha Adhikari is a Nepali nurse and a Research Associate at the Centre for South Asian Studies, University of Edinburgh, UK.

'Based on a rich study of Nepali nurses and their migration journeys to the UK, this book makes excellent contributions to the study of the gendered migration of healthcare professionals in the context of global health inequalities. Suitably subtitled as "The Dreams and Traps of Nepali Nurses", it offers excellent accounts of the experiences, struggles, and successes of female Nepali nurses in the UK. Adhikari offers a powerful ethnographic critique of dominant stereotypical representations of Nepali women. It will be of particular interest to those studying the migration of healthcare professionals and gender and development.'

—Jeevan R. Sharma, University of Edinburgh

'Nurse migration and mobility continues to grow in magnitude, and the flows become more varied and complex. The implications for policy at national, regional, and global levels become ever more pronounced. This book adds new insights into the lived experience of the nurses who move, and in particular it improves our understanding of the dynamics that are in play in Asia, a region that includes many countries with significant nursing shortages, and the UK, a popular destination country for Asian nurses.'

—James Buchan, University of Technology, Sydney (UTS)