References
- Abraham, M. (2000). Speaking the unspeakable: Marital violence among South Asian immigrants in the United States. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
- Bartolini, L., Gropas, R., & Triandafyllidou, A. (2017). Drivers of highly skilled mobility from Southern Europe: Escaping the crisis and emancipating oneself. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 43, 652–673.10.1080/1369183X.2016.1249048
- Bélanger, D., & Rahman, M. (2013). Migrating against all the odds: International labour migration of Bangladeshi women. Current Sociology, 61, 356–373.10.1177/0011392113484453
- Breiding M. J., Basile K. C., Smith S. G., Black M. C., & Mahendra R. R. (2015) Intimate partner violence surveillance: Uniform definitions and recommended data elements (Version 2.0). Atlanta (GA): National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
- DasGupta, S., & Dasgupta, S. D. (1996). Women in exile: Gender relations in the Asian Indian community in the U.S. In S. Maira & R. Srikanth (Eds.), Contours of the heart: South Asians map America (pp. 381–400). New York: Asian American Writers’ Workshop.
- Elveren, Y., & Toksöz, G. (2017). Why don’t highly skilled women want to return? Turkey’s Brain drain from a gender perspective. MPRA Paper No. 80290.
- Erez, E., Adelman, M., & Gregory, C. (2009). Intersections of immigration and domestic violence: Voices of battered immigrant women. Feminist Criminology, 4, 32–56.10.1177/1557085108325413
- Kallivayalil, D. (2010). Narratives of suffering of South Asian immigrant survivors of domestic violence. Violence Against Women, 16, 789–811.10.1177/1077801210374209
- Kibria, N. (2008). The New Islam and Bangladeshi youth in Britain and the U.S. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 31, 243–266.10.1080/01419870701337593
- Kofman, E. (2012). Gender and skilled migration in Europe. Cuadernos de Relaciones Laborales, 30, 63–89.
- Kurien, P. (2001). Review of speaking in the unspeakable. Social Forces, 79, 1542–1543.10.1353/sof.2001.0045
- Mahmud, H. (2013). Enemy or ally: Migrants, intermediaries and the state in Bangladeshi migration to Japan and the United States. Migration and Development, 2(1), 1–15.10.1080/21632324.2012.759438
- Mahmud, H. (2014). Bangladeshi Americans. In M. Y. Danico (Ed.), Asian American Society: An encyclopedia. Los Angeles, CA: Sage.
- Marcus, Rachel. (1993). Violence against women in Bangladesh, Pakistan, Egypt, Sudan, Senegal and Yemen. Report prepared for Special Program WID, Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs (DGIS).
- Menjivar, C., & Salcido, O. (2002). Immigrant women and domestic violence: Common experiences in different countries. Gender and Society, 16, 898–920.10.1177/089124302237894
- Mohanty, C. T. (1984). Under Western eye: Feminist scholarship and colonial discourse. Boundary 12–13: 333–358.
- National Coalition Against Domestic Violence. (2015). https://ncadv.org/files/National%20Statistics%20Domestic%20Violence%20NCADV.pdf
- South Asian Networks. (2010). From displacement to internment: A report on human rights violations experienced by LA’s South Asian immigrant Communities. Artesia, CA: South Asian Nework.
- The United Nations (1995). Report of the Fourth Conference on Women. Beijing, 4-15 September.
- The United Nations Women (2011). United nations entity for gender equality and the empowerment of women. Annual Report.
- United Nations High Commission for Refugees. (2004). Bangladesh: Violence against women, especially domestic violence; state protection and resources available to survivors of abuse. Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada.
- United States AID. (2008). Intimate partner violence among couples in 10 DHs countries: Predictors and health outcomes. DHS Analytical Studies 18, Calverton, MD, USA.