Abstract

ABSTRACT This paper discusses transnational care and border regimes in the context of the East Timorese exile in rural Indonesia. Drawing from multi-sited ethnographic research, it explores the ways older people cope with family separation and life in exile, their aspirations, when and how transnational care becomes “on hold”, and how they deal with the impossibility of meeting intergenerational and cultural obligations. Analyzing care using the lens of “circulation”, the paper attends to the asymmetries entailed in intergenerational relationships as well as to how uneven power relations of border regimes shape transnational care exchanges. In the context of “aging in exile”, the paper underlines the importance of understanding older persons’ narratives as they are linked with the ambivalences of other family members across generations. The paper argues that the forms of immobility withholding or limiting caregiving can transcend physical boundaries. They can include the social and emotional borders conflict-divided communities build against one another over time. These “imaginary” borders require us to think about the additional asymmetries entailed in precarious familial relations and how this affects the multiple meanings of care in the context of contemporary border regimes and amid enduring legacies of violence.

Highlights

  • I remember everyday. . . left behind my grandchildren over there

  • The paper argues that the forms of immobility withholding or limiting caregiving can transcend physical boundaries. They can include the social and emotional borders conflict-divided communities build against one another over time. These “imaginary” borders require us to think about the additional asymmetries entailed in precarious familial relations and how this affects the multiple meanings of care in the context of contemporary border regimes and amid enduring legacies of violence

  • The analysis aims to gain a nuanced understanding of aging in exile and the multiple meanings of aging care alongside “hard” border regimes and amid enduring legacies of violence

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Summary

Introduction

I remember everyday. . . left behind my grandchildren over there. Some stayed there. This paper discusses transnational care and border regimes in the context of the East Timorese exile in rural Indonesia. Communities back home and in the new settlement, often extend these sentiments to generalize the East Timorese population in West Timor as a whole, citing their continued exile as the consequence of political difference and for leaving past crimes unattended (Damaledo, 2018; Sakti, 2017).

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