Autor: Janine Dahinden

Care at the Intersection of Mobility and Gender/Sexuality Regimes: Past Legacies

23.11.2023 , in ((Towards a Novel Mobility Regime)) , ((Keine Kommentare))

Following the COVID-19 pandemic, problematic past legacies emerged from the intersection of mobility and gender/sexuality regimes. By diving into these continuities, I examine two compelling case studies – domestic caregivers and sex workers. These cases allow me to study how a global, but also a national, crisis of care emerged ...

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Towards a Novel Mobility Regime? The Legacies of the COVID-19 Pandemic Regarding the Governance of Human Movement

14.11.2023 , in ((Towards a Novel Mobility Regime)) , ((Keine Kommentare))
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Following the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, authorities deployed a myriad of „exceptional“ measures that severely impacted the possibilities of human movement. States restricted, controlled and monitored people on the move at various social and spatial scales. The emerging „regime of (im)mobility“ turned out to be highly differential and ...

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Twenty Years of ‚Reflexive‘ Migration Studies: Introduction to the Blog Series

31.05.2022 , in ((Reflexive Migration Studies)) , ((Keine Kommentare))
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Research about migration has arguably been dominated by a western-, and nation-state-centered perspective. In response, reflexive debates on knowledge production have addressed methodological nationalism and colonial legacies, but also androcentrism, heteronormativity and other problematic features in scientific approaches to human mobility. This blog series aims to take stock of the ...

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A Call for Solidarity with All Refugees, Beyond Double Standards!

24.03.2022 , in ((Europe on the Brink)) , ((1 Kommentar))

Since Putin’s invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022, two observations among others, are haunting many social scientists: First, unprecedented solidarity of European states and their people with refugees fleeing Ukraine. Second, a double standard applied to other refugee groups from Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq or African countries. These two observations ...

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