A Place in the Homeland?: Turkish-German Return Migration
What happens when the second generation – the children of immigrants – moves to their parents’ homeland? A Place in the Homeland: Turkish-German Return Migration answers this question for the Turkish-German second-generation, sons and daughters of the Turkish guestworkers and political refugees who migrated to Germany in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. Based on 71 in-depth narrative interviews, their life-stories of growing up in German industrial cities and then ‘returning’ to Turkey are traced through their experiences of childhood and socialisation, relocation to Turkey, earning a living, managing family and other relationships, adapting to an environment that many found challenging and developing new, hybrid identities in the ancestral homeland. The key finding is that ‘place matters’, and experiences are compared and contrasted between second-generation returnees in the megalopolis of Istanbul, the tourist city of Antalya and a range of provincial urban and rural environments in other regions of Turkey.
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A Place in the Homeland?: Turkish-German Return Migration
What happens when the second generation – the children of immigrants – moves to their parents’ homeland? A Place in the Homeland: Turkish-German Return Migration answers this question for the Turkish-German second-generation, sons and daughters of the Turkish guestworkers and political refugees who migrated to Germany in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. Based on 71 in-depth narrative interviews, their life-stories of growing up in German industrial cities and then ‘returning’ to Turkey are traced through their experiences of childhood and socialisation, relocation to Turkey, earning a living, managing family and other relationships, adapting to an environment that many found challenging and developing new, hybrid identities in the ancestral homeland. The key finding is that ‘place matters’, and experiences are compared and contrasted between second-generation returnees in the megalopolis of Istanbul, the tourist city of Antalya and a range of provincial urban and rural environments in other regions of Turkey.
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A Place in the Homeland?: Turkish-German Return Migration

A Place in the Homeland?: Turkish-German Return Migration

A Place in the Homeland?: Turkish-German Return Migration

A Place in the Homeland?: Turkish-German Return Migration

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Overview

What happens when the second generation – the children of immigrants – moves to their parents’ homeland? A Place in the Homeland: Turkish-German Return Migration answers this question for the Turkish-German second-generation, sons and daughters of the Turkish guestworkers and political refugees who migrated to Germany in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. Based on 71 in-depth narrative interviews, their life-stories of growing up in German industrial cities and then ‘returning’ to Turkey are traced through their experiences of childhood and socialisation, relocation to Turkey, earning a living, managing family and other relationships, adapting to an environment that many found challenging and developing new, hybrid identities in the ancestral homeland. The key finding is that ‘place matters’, and experiences are compared and contrasted between second-generation returnees in the megalopolis of Istanbul, the tourist city of Antalya and a range of provincial urban and rural environments in other regions of Turkey.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781474494571
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Publication date: 02/28/2025
Series: Edinburgh Studies on Diasporas and Transnationalism
Pages: 272
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.00(d)

About the Author

Nilay Kılınç is a social anthropologist and an ethnographic filmmaker with an interdisciplinary background and focus on migration, mobilities, diasporas and transnationalism. She holds a postdoctoral researcher position at the Helsinki Institute of Urban and Regional Studies, University of Helsinki. She is one of the two representatives of Finland in immigration and integration matters at the Nordic Migrant Expert Forum under the Nordic Council of Ministers. Her current research (2023-2026) is funded by KONE Foundation and explores the democratic participation of creative migrants in Finland. She has extensively researched the second-generation Turkish-German migrants’ return migration to Turkey and highly skilled migrants from Turkey in Europe, particularly in the Nordic region. She has published solo and co-authored articles in journals such as Ethnic and Racial Studies, Demographic Research, Nordic Journal of Migration Research and Global Networks and recently contributed to two edited book volumes; The Routledge International Handbook of Transnational Studies (2024, M. Fauser & X. Bada eds.); Handbook of Return Migration (2022, R. King & K. Kuschminder eds.).

Russell King is Emeritus Professor of Geography at the University of Sussex and Visiting Professor in Migration Studies at Malmö University. He has been teaching, researching and publishing on migration for fifty years. At Sussex he was the founding director of the Sussex Centre for Migration Research and established the university’s MA and PhD programmes in Migration Studies. Supported by several research grants, he has coordinated research projects on return migration, international retirement migration, remittances and gender, international student migration, EU youth migration and the formation of scientific diasporas. He has published papers in most of the leading human geography and migration journals. His most recent books are: Anxieties of Migration and Integration in Turbulent Times (Springer, 2023, co-editor), Onward Migration and Multi-Sited Transnationalism (Springer, 2023, co-editor), Handbook of Return Migration (Edward Elgar, 2022, co-editor) and Young EU Migrants in London in the Transition to Brexit (Routledge, 2022, co-author).

Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgements
List of Figures
List of Tables


1. What is Second-Generation ‘Return’ Migration?
2. Return to Turkey: The Importance of Place
3. The Turkish-German Second Generation: Family Migration Histories and Second-Generation Lives in Germany
4. Why Return? An Exploration of Routes and Decision-Making
5. Earning a Living: Transcultural Capital and Building a Career
6. Gender, Family and Marriage in Return Migration
7. Transnational Identities and Activities in Post-Return Lives
8. The Future: At home in the Homeland?

References

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