Class notes

Week 4: Transnational families and global gifts

ANTH 1002, Sem 2, 2025

Week 4: Transnational families and global gifts

ANTH 1002: Anthropology for a better world (Semester 2, 2025)
August 26, 2025

Main reading: Leinaweaver (2010); Wright (2020)

Notes

In 2020 and 2021, many people went into lockdown and lived day after day in their impenentrable household bubble or pod, some people were participating in their families across borders and at long distances.

Jordan, Miriam. 2020. “Even When They Lost Their Jobs, Immigrants Sent Money Home.” The New York Times, September 24, 2020, sec. U.S. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/24/us/coronavirus-immigrants-remittances.html.

While some people waited for their next delivery of home gym equipment, and perhaps shook a raised fist at the delays, exclaiming “supply chain problems!!” There was one global flow that kept on going: remittances, cash gifts sent between family members, usually from wealthy countries to poor countries.

Remittances are a major part of the global capitalist system, accounting for a substantial portion of foreign flows of money in many countries. In these countries, it is right to say that their main global export is people. Their remittances are worth over US$650 billion in 2020, down only slightly from 2019, worth more than the global trade in telephones—US$125 billion, including both cellphones and landlines—and cars—US$645 billion (OEC 2022a, 2022b).

Remittances are also gifts, and more specifically, they are a portion of the wages for commodified labor power appropriated for the purposes of reciprocity. As such they challenge what we know of kinship and of global capitalism.

In previous versions of ANTH 1002, students read the work of Rebecca Prentice. Remittances are another example of what Prentice calls “productive sociality” which she defines as “informal networks of mutual aid” (Prentice 2015, 88). What she finds among workers on the shop floor also takes place across continents. In Prentice’s case, informal social ties also unexpectedly generate value for the bosses of factory workers. Likewise, the productive sociality of remittances also sustains global capitalism itself. The capitalist global economy depends on people’s reciprocity with kin across international borders. We see this not only in remittances but in other kinds of transnational kinship. Like remittances, the practices of kinship in migrant networks weave together caring for family and buying commodities, domains we usually assume are and should be separate.

Keywords

remittances, efflorescence, contradictions (within capitalism)

Learning outcomes

  • Be able to formulate an interpretation of remittances as evidence for migration as a social network
  • Understand why remittances within transnational households contradict dominant narratives of global capitalism
  • Understand global capitalism as a response to contradictions within capitalism

Discussion questions

  • What are your experiences with sending and receiving money?
  • Look at page 75 of Leinaweaver’s (2010) article. Create a key for every symbol used. (Use online sources or AI-generated summaries to help.) Draw new symbols to represent the important exchanges that happen among the people mentioned in the text.
  • Victor and Carmen have not lived in their hometown for over ten years, but were the sponsors of an important festival (Leinaweaver 2010, 74). They are both emigrants, people who have left, and yet still part of this social system. Based on Leinaweaver’s ethnographic description, how can we explain this paradox? Given this, what is migration?
  • According to one relative, Mateo once said to Carmen and Victor when she visited, “You aren’t my mama, you aren’t my papa. My mama is Cristina.” Carmen then said to them, “If he says this now, what it will be like when he’s older?” (Leinaweaver 2010, 75). Reflect on your understanding of these relationships based on your experience and on the ethnographic cases we have read so far. What will it be like when Mateo is older? (Or when he was an older child. He is 33 now.)

References

Leinaweaver, Jessaca B. 2010. “Outsourcing Care: How Peruvian Migrants Meet Transnational Family Obligations.” Latin American Perspectives 37 (5): 67–87. https://doi.org/10.1177/0094582X10380222.
OEC. 2022a. “Cars.” OEC - The Observatory of Economic Complexity. 2022. https://oec.world/en/profile/hs/cars.
———. 2022b. “Telephones.” OEC - The Observatory of Economic Complexity. 2022. https://oec.world/en/profile/hs/telephones.
Prentice, Rebecca. 2015. Thiefing a Chance: Factory Work, Illicit Labor, and Neoliberal Subjectivities in Trinidad. Boulder, Colo.: University Press of Colorado. http://www.upcolorado.com/university-press-of-colorado/item/2685-thiefing-a-chance.
Wright, Andrea. 2020. “Making Kin from Gold: Dowry, Gender, and Indian Labor Migration to the Gulf.” Cultural Anthropology 35 (3): 435–61. https://doi.org/10.14506/ca35.3.04.