2012 ©
             TH, publication_detail
TH, publication_article
TH, publication_conference_work_name Entrepreneurship of Female Return Migrants Working Abroad 
TH, publication_conference_publish_date 13 September 2022 
TH, publication_conference_conference
     TH, publication_conference_conference_name The RC20 Regional Conference on Comparative Sociology & the 2nd RC33 Regional Conference on Social Science Methodology: Asia 
     TH, publication_conference_conference_institute Japan Women's University 
     TH, publication_conference_conference_place Tokyo, Japan 
     TH, publication_conference_conference_province Tokyo, Japan 
     TH, publication_conference_conference_from_date 12 September 2022 
     TH, publication_conference_conference_to_date 16 September 2022 
TH, publication_conference_proceeding
     TH, publication_conference_proceeding_volume_short 2022 
     TH, publication_conference_proceeding_issue_short
     TH, publication_conference_proceeding_page_short 48-60 
     TH, publication_conference_proceeding_editor_short Japan Women's University 
     TH, publication_conference_abstract This article aims to studying the entrepreneurship of female return migrant working abroad. The qualitative research method was used and was based on phenomenology, with the analytical unit at the individual and household levels. The data was collected from February until July 2020, by in-depth interviewing conducted with 14 female return migrants and by semi-structured interviewing conducted with 10 households of the female return migrants, in addition to group interviewing with 21 community leaders. The data was analyzed by the content analysis method. The results showed that most of the return migrants were males and married. More than half completed the secondary education and had previous experience of migration, both legally and illegally, with the destinations principally in South Korea, Israel and Taiwan, during which they worked in factories, farms, and in the service sector, earning USD625-2,656 monthly. When they return migrate, more than 3-quarters of female return migrant has used human capital, economic capital, and social capital accumulated form working abroad to develop to become entrepreneurs in both agribusiness and private businesses, such as modern farming, livestock, industrial factories, shop, and restaurant. It is a transition from traditional agricultural to commercial for the sustainability of return migrant and household. 
TH, publication_article_writer
617080017-0 Mr. NATTAWAT AURAIAMPAI [TH, publication_article_main_writer]
Humanities and Social Sciences Doctoral Degree

TH, publication_conference_evaluation มีผู้ประเมินอิสระ 
TH, publication_conference_level นานาชาติ 
TH, publication_conference_proceeding_style Full paper 
TH, publication_conference_presentation_style Oral 
TH, publication_conference_part_of_thesis TH, publication_conference_part_of_thesis_true 
TH, publication_conference_part_of_graduate TH, publication_conference_part_of_graduate_false 
TH, publication_conference_is_reward TH, publication_conference_is_reward_false 
TH, publication_attachment_file
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