Transnationalism Study Guide
Study Guide
📖 Core Concepts
Transnationalism – Social phenomenon and research field describing sustained links (people, institutions, ideas, goods) that cross national borders.
Economic transnationalism – Global division of labor; production stages spread across countries to cut costs.
Social fields – Overlapping economic, political, and cultural activities that connect migrants’ origin and host societies.
Remittances – Monetary (financial) or social (cultural, knowledge) transfers that flow from migrants to their home communities.
Transnational actors – Multinational corporations, diaspora networks, and “transnationalism from below” worker cooperatives that operate across borders.
---
📌 Must Remember
$300 billion in monetary remittances (2006) moved from immigrants in developed countries to their origins.
Containerization → dramatic drop in transportation costs → firms locate production stages abroad.
Internet & wireless tech (late‑20th c.) = faster, cheaper cross‑border information flow, spurring economic transnationalism.
Pro‑transnational capitalism claims free flow of people, ideas, goods, money, information, science.
Critical view: same flows concentrate capital in global elite hands, heightening inequality and ecological crises.
Transnationalism from below emphasizes cooperative worker networks and social movements, not profit‑driven corporations.
---
🔄 Key Processes
Global production network formation
Identify cost‑minimizing stages → locate each stage in a country with comparative advantage → connect via shipping/communication → integrate into a multinational corporation’s supply chain.
Immigrant social field creation
Migrant settles → maintains economic ties (remittances, business investment) → engages politically (vote, lobby, party membership) → transmits cultural practices (social remittances).
Technology‑driven acceleration
New transport/communication tech → lower transaction costs → more frequent cross‑border interactions → expansion of transnational networks.
---
🔍 Key Comparisons
Pro‑transnational capitalism vs. Critical transnational capitalism
Pro: Emphasizes free flow, innovation, mutual benefit.
Critical: Highlights capital concentration, inequality, ecological harm.
Transnationalism from below vs. Multinational corporate transnationalism
Below: Worker‑led, cooperative, socially oriented.
Corporate: Profit‑maximizing, hierarchical, elite‑driven.
Diaspora (historical) vs. Contemporary immigrant transnationalism
Diaspora: Often involuntary, rooted in long‑term settlement patterns.
Contemporary: Voluntary migration, active maintenance of ties, digital communication.
---
⚠️ Common Misunderstandings
“Immigration = poverty‑driven” – Transnationalism shows geopolitical, capitalist, and network factors also drive movement.
“National borders are obsolete” – Borders still shape regulation, rights, and power, even as cross‑border links grow.
“All diasporas are voluntary” – Many historic diasporas resulted from forced migration, colonization, or conflict.
“Remittances are only money” – Social remittances (ideas, practices, social capital) are equally vital.
---
🧠 Mental Models / Intuition
Web‑instead‑Wall model – Imagine societies as nodes in a web, with strands (trade, ideas, people) crossing the “walls” of nation‑states. The stronger the strands, the less the wall matters for daily life.
Cost‑flow funnel – Visualize production as a funnel: each stage flows to the cheapest location; the funnel’s shape is set by transport & communication costs.
---
🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases
Involuntary diaspora – Forced migrations (e.g., slavery, refugee crises) create transnational ties but with asymmetrical power dynamics.
Service‑sector migration – Unlike manufacturing, service jobs often lack union protection, creating a distinct low‑wage migrant labor pool.
Legal regimes – Decolonization or post‑Cold‑War human‑rights expansions can temporarily weaken state monopolies, but later policy reversals may re‑tighten borders.
---
📍 When to Use Which
Analyzing economic flows → apply global division of labor framework (production network steps).
Evaluating power dynamics → use critical transnational capitalism lens to expose elite concentration.
Studying grassroots movements → adopt transnationalism from below perspective.
Assessing migrant impact on home societies → focus on social fields and social remittances concepts.
---
👀 Patterns to Recognize
Technology → Cost ↓ → Cross‑border activity ↑ (e.g., internet, containerization).
Low‑wage service demand ↔ Migrant labor supply – look for questions linking service‑sector growth to immigration spikes.
Remittance figures paired with “digital communication” – signals a social‑cultural transnational activity question.
---
🗂️ Exam Traps
Distractor: “Transnationalism eliminates the relevance of the nation‑state.” – Wrong; states still control rights, visas, and regulation.
Distractor: “All diaspora communities are voluntary.” – Incorrect; many arose from forced migration.
Distractor: Confusing economic remittances (money) with social remittances (ideas, practices). Both are distinct but often appear together.
Distractor: Assuming containerization only affects trade volume, not the geographic spread of production stages.
---
or
Or, immediately create your own study flashcards:
Upload a PDF.
Master Study Materials.
Master Study Materials.
Start learning in seconds
Drop your PDFs here or
or