"THEY WANT TO LIVE A GOOD LIFE": NARRATIVES OF IRREGULAR MIGRANTS' FAMILIES IN DISTRICT GUJRAT, PAKISTAN
Abstract
The present study aims to explore how the family members of the irregular
emigrants who were left behind in Pakistan describe their narratives
regarding the purpose of irregular migration of their male family members.
This study is based on a qualitative research design by employing a
constructivist epistemological standpoint. The current research's target
population comprises the male family members of the irregular emigrants in
the rural areas of district Gujrat, Pakistan. For the present study, a snowball
sampling technique has been used to select the respondents because it was
challenging to identify irregular emigrants due to their hidden nature. In the
first phase of the data collection, some male family members of the emigrants
were contacted working in a public sector organization in district Gujrat with
the principal researcher. Later on, these initial contacts facilitated the
primary researcher to approach various family members of the irregular
emigrants in the peripheral villages of Gujrat city. The fieldwork comprised
in-depth interviews, which were started with a broader discussion on the issue
of irregular migration. The initial four in-depth interviews were analyzed parallel, which led to the emergence of new themes for further interviews. A
total of thirteen in-depth interviews were conducted until saturation. Three
major themes emerged from the data as poverty, inequality and migration;
social class and competition; and Europe as a dream land.