Abstract

Based on interviews with Latvian emigrants collected between 2008-2014 in England, Ireland and the USA, this paper asks: How do migrants’ perceptions of inequality in their sending and receiving states, and their associated emotional responses, influence their migration experiences and decisions? This paper finds that inequality is significant, not only in a strictly economic sense, but also in terms of the socio-emotional and cultural dimensions that accompany it. Through an examination of migrants' meaning making, I identify four scenarios of what I call the inequality-emotion tie: resentment and anger towards the ruling elite as unjust; exploitation and feelings of humiliation at work; inability to consume and associated feelings of deprivation and inferiority; and perceived inferiority in daily interactions. Through these four scenarios, I find that the inequality that exists in a migrant's home society creates resentment and anger towards ruling elites and employers, as well as creating perceptions and feelings about the self as inferior. Conversely, the inequality that exists in receiving states, where inequality levels are actually comparable, does not have the same effect. In these countries, migrants described positive experiences with associated feelings of recognition, making a return to the home country less appealing.

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