Situated at the intersections of anthropology, migration, citizenship, and social movement studies, this volume theorises a crisis-mobility nexus by focusing on empirical case studies. These concern migration struggles; the entanglements of crisis, social mobility, and citizenship; as well as the impact of COVID-19 (im)mobility on social movements. By highlighting examples from these streams, the book illuminates entanglements between them, while emphasising the role of solidarity as well as de-solidarisation in creating, shaping, or resisting various regimes of mobility.
İçerik tablosu
Chapter 1 – Regimes of mobility in times of accelerated crisis, Leandros Fischer.- Chapter 2 – Deportable mobilities: The many lives of the European deportation regime, Martin Bak Jørgensen.- Chapter 3 – Rethinking mobility regimes at the local scale: Possibilities and limitations, Martin Bak Jørgensen & Leandros Fischer.- Chapter 4 – Dubai and Cyprus as geographies of social mobility between Europe and the Middle East, Jaafar Alloul & Leandros Fischer.- Chapter 5 – Between solidarity and de-solidarisation: COVID-19 as a crisis of mobility, Leandros Fischer.- Chapter 6 – Essential workers without essential rights: COVID-19, migrant workers, and trade unions, Mark Bergfeld & Martin Bak Jørgensen.- Chapter 7 – New crises, new mobilities, and the promise of solidarity, Leandros Fischer.
Yazar hakkında
Leandros Fischer is Assistant Professor for International Studies at the Department of Culture and Learning at Aalborg University, Denmark. He researches migration, citizenship, and social and political movements.