ABSTRACT By integrating a study of gender, class, and nationality as categories of analysis, this article identifies nursing mobility as a multidirectional and asymmetric social phenomenon and employs a comparative approach at several levels: national, regional, and transnational. Nursing spatial mobility encompassed three major trends: influx of foreign nurses, intra‐state moves, and international fellowship circuits. The article, based on multilingual archival sources, argues that nursing opened new job possibilities for women, but the close cooperation between the state, the army, and the domestic and international humanitarian philanthropy also reinforced traditional and produced new social, cultural, and gender inequalities.
Evguenia Davidova (Mon,) studied this question.
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