TY - BOOK AU - Kerrigan,Nathan AU - de Lima,Philomena TI - The Rural-Migration Nexus: Global Problems, Rural Issues T2 - Rethinking Rural, SN - 9783031180422 U1 - 660.6 23 PY - 2023/// CY - Cham PB - Springer International Publishing, Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan KW - Biotechnology KW - Globalization KW - Social structure KW - Equality KW - Industrial sociology KW - Agriculture KW - Economic aspects KW - Human geography KW - Social Structure KW - Sociology of Work KW - Agricultural Economics KW - Human Geography N1 - Chapter One: Introduction -- Chapter Two: Should I Stay or Should I Go? Developing migrant-led understandings of welcoming rural communities -- Chapter Three: On the hypermobility of agricultural workers in Europe: Life courses between rural Moldova and Switzerland/the EU -- Chapter Four: "Caging all tigers": Pathways to occupational health and safety for transnational agricultural workers in Canada -- Chapter Five: Living better but separated: the emotional impacts of the Canadian Seasonal Agricultural Workers Programme on transmigrant workers -- Chapter Six: Migrants, Refugees and Settlement Camps in the Rural and Urban Fringes of Serbia: Cultural Repertoires, Changing Understandings and Imaginings of the Other -- Chapter Seven: Being Global and Being Regional: Refugee entrepreneurship in regional Australia -- Chapter Eight: Conclusion N2 - This edited collection aims to examine the global-rural relationship of migration that shapes rural places. It does this by acknowledging that to understand the impact of the international migration-global nexus, it is essential to explore how it is experienced at a local level - in the context of this book, rural regions. Focusing on agribusiness and rural development, as well as the othering of international migrants and the shifting boundaries of belonging in rural spaces, the chapters in this book examine how globalisation, with migration being a constitutive feature, influences different rural contexts in the 'Global North' and the impact this has on migrant populations. Chapters demonstrate the harsh lived experiences/realities characterised by mental health issues and emotional labour for migrants, occupational health and safety issues in the workplace and experiences of exclusion and racism from 'host' communities. These chapters taken together identify a rural-migration nexus where the relationship between international migration and localised rural spaces are mutually constitutive. UR - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-18042-2 ER -