Page 5 - Q1 V1 RESEARCH@FASS
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Highlights

                                                                       • Migrant workers' social practices in which
                                                                       diverse actors and factors interact, creates
                                                                          emotions on both sides of the border.

                                                                          • Social practices and the consequent
                                                                       emotions can either conserve or transform
                                                                                  transnational affect.

                                                                          • Ritual gatherings, living with fellow
                                                                       workers from same district and engaging in
                                                                            intense communication intensify
                                                                                  transnational affects.

        Abstract                                                         • Social practices with a high degree of

        This article, argues that migrant workers’ social practices within the local  homeland orientation conserve transnational
        contexts in which diverse actors (co-workers, relatives, employers, agents       affect.
        and officials) and factors (such as wages, victimisation, bereavement and
        remittance) interact, creates emotions, and affects on both sides of the
        border. The diverse social practices and consequent emotions can either  Keywords
        conserve or transform relationships with family, friends, and homeland
        within the transnational social fields. Social practices of victimisation and
        the  precarious  conditions  in  which  they  live  make  them  feel  insecure,           Social
        alienated, and emotionally tensed. Some friends and relatives who acted  Emotions
        as  agents  and  sub-agents  victimised  them  because  such  victimisers  did          practices
        not  fear  ostracism  in  the  transnational  social  field.  Furthermore,  when
        victimised by agents, employers, and officials, they remain docile, which
        indicates that their agency is incapacitated. In this situation, the migrant  Transnational  Emotions of
        workers felt excluded and marginalised. Therefore, their social practices  affect        migration
        were directed towards safe spaces such as ritual gatherings, living with
        fellow  workers  from  the  same  district  and  engaging  in  intense
        communication with family members in Pakistan with a high degree of
                                                                         Geographies        Pakistani migrant
        homeland orientation. In addition, remittances have affective resonance,
        which  conserves  transnational  affect.  Data  were  obtained  from  35  in-  of emotions  workers
        depth informal interviews with Pakistani migrant workers in Malaysia.


                                                                                 Highlights


                                                                       • The yearly average of PM10 exceeds all
                                                                         health guidelines during haze in 2015

                                                                     • CO has been established well to reflect the
                                                                                 intensity of the haze

                                                                     • A covariation of BC flux with CO and PM10
                                                                       concentrations was observed during haze

                                                                      • Southern Malaysian Peninsula and Borneo
                                                                        were impacted from fires in Kalimantan

        Abstract                                                                 Keywords

        The Southeast Asian (SEA) region is no stranger to forest fires - the region has been suffering
        from severe air pollution (known locally as ‘haze’) as a result of these fires, for decades. The fires in
                                                                                                     Trace
        SEA region are caused by a combination of natural (the El Niño weather pattern) and manmade  Aerosol
        (slash-and-burn and land clearing for plantations) factors. These fires cause the emissions of toxic  gases
        aerosols and pollutants that can affect millions of people in the region. Thus, this study aims to
        identify  the  impact  of  the  SEA  haze  on  the  Southern  region  of  the  Malaysian  Peninsula  and
                                                                                                  Wild Forest
        Borneo region of East Malaysia using the entire air quality observation data at surface level in  Haze
        2015.  Overall,  the  concentration  of  PM10  was  about  two-fold  higher  during  the  haze  period  fires
        compared to non-haze period. The concentrations of CO, flux of CO and flux of BC were aligned
        with PM10 during the entire observation period. The wind field and cluster of trajectory indicated
                                                                                  Biomass           Peatland
        that the Southern Malaysian Peninsula and Borneo were influenced mainly from the wildfires and
        the combustion of peat soil in the Indonesian Borneo. This study finds that wildfires from Borneo  burning  fires
        impacted the Southern Malaysian Borneo more seriously than that from Sumatra region.

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