COVID-19 + Mobility
News
Within our research community, there has been an urgent effort to better understand the impact of COVID-19 on migration and mobility. We have compiled a list of resources to assist you in understanding the pandemic’s consequences on borders, citizenship, and human mobility with information from various fields.
Migration and Mobility in a Pandemic
Governments have significantly constrained human movement in response to the COVID-19 outbreak. We have created the Migration and Mobility in a Pandemic (MMP) tool, based on two collected datasets, to provide systematic information on which governments have taken which measures and at what moment. They include detailed information regarding International Travel Restrictions, and Mobility and Border Controls.
Articles on COVID-19 + Mobility
Below you can find a list of blog contributions, short articles, and academic forums about COVID-19 and mobility.
If you have additional recommendations, please do get in touch with Inka Sayed.
Coronavirus sheds light on Canada's poor treatment of migrant workers | |
Cox's Bazar refugee camps: where social distancing is impossible | |
Calling Out the Law with a Lie: Community Perspectives on Precarity, Welfare and Law in Times of Covid-19 in Sweden | |
African Migrants in Yemen Scapegoated for Coronavirus Outbreak | |
Past pandemics exacerbated disadvantages – what we can learn from them about the coronavirus recovery | |
Migration and Mobility after the 2020 Pandemic: The End of an Age? | |
Interactive Dashboard with Key Findings of the COVID Survey The COVID survey was conducted between April 22 and May 4, 2020 with 1'535 people living in Switzerland. This online tool presents some key findings and allows you to explore the data yourself. | |
Mobility and Border Control in Response to the COVID-19 Outbreak | |
Covid-19 and the sudden death of free movement | |
Covid-19 crisis stokes European tensions over migrant labour | |
Immunity passports – unwise and unnecessary Governments are considering ‘immunity passports’ to allow those with COVID-19 antibodies greater mobility: this would lead to mass discrimination in the labor market, and also provide perverse incentives to potential migrants to become infected. | |
“The less we move, the more we can contain the virus”: How COVID-19 fundamentally alters understandings of mobility and the free movement of people | |
Immigration in the age of covid | |
The coronavirus pandemic could be devastating for the world's migrants | |
The global COVID-19 response must include refugees and migrants | |
Covid-19 and enduring stigma | |
Human mobility and human rights in the COVID-19 pandemic: Principles of protection for migrants, refugees, and other displaced persons | |
How has the pandemic affected migrants and refugees? | |
Transformed privileges of im/mobility and COVID-19 | |
Contagion and containment - Curtailing the freedom of movement in times of coronavirus | |
International Travel Restrictions in Response to the Coronavirus Outbreak | |
Inequality at the Border: How Visa Costs Penalize Citizens of Poor World Regions | |
Expert Voice: COVID-19 – Migration in the Age of Biosecurity | |
From national threat to oblivion. Erasing migrants from public discourse in Italy during COVID-19 | |
Living with the new coronavirus: learning from pastoralists | |
The Coronavirus and Mobility Forum | |
The limits of protection, prevention and care. A miniseries on refugees in the COVID-19 pandemic | |
Returning “Home”–Nationalist International Law in the Time of the Coronavirus | |
Deadly Consequences of "Business as Usual" and Immigration Enforcement As COVID-19 rapidly advances across the country, life continues as usual for the 38,000 immigrants who are detained in the US, including approximately 7,000 children. | |
How Will the COVID-19 Pandemic Reshape Refugee and Migration Governance? | |
Beating Covid-19: The problem with national lockdowns March 26, 2020 - LSE EUROPP – European Politics and Policy Blog | |
Borders in the time of COVID-19 While extraordinary measures such as restrictive mobility, social distancing, and even preventive quarantine appear to be the necessary call of the hour, when the day comes that we defeat this deadly virus we will need to proactively undo the draconian surveillance and control measures that this virus has unleashed without hesitation. Ayelet Shahar March 24, 2020 - Ethics & International Affairs | |
We created this beast. The political ecology of COVID-19 Containment measures of social distancing bear the characteristics of a general strike, it can serve as an experiment taking back control over our own time. | |
How the Virus Got Out | |
The pandemic kills also the European solidarity | |
‘Take me home’: the coronavirus virus and panic mobility Panic mobility is a phenomenon in which humans act as somewhat unwitting vectors of lethal viruses by moving rapidly away from known sites of infection in significant numbers. | |
Migrant integration in times of the lockdown. Some reflections from Italy How will the pandemic impact ethnic boundary-making and migrant integration? | |
Borders in the Time of Coronavirus: How the COVID-19 Pandemic Upended the Global Mobility Paradigm As countries of the Global South are closing off their borders, Europeans must confront national frontiers once again, a reality that they have long felt had become obsolete. | |
Will Covid-19 be the end of the global citizen? We are now pandemic citizens, increasingly stuck inside closed nation-states surrounded by contradictory new walls and old borders. | |
Travel Bans in Europe: A Legal Appraisal Since many European countries have closed down their borders to limit the spread of COVID-19, the European Commission should assist them to clarify categories of (il)legitimate travel, defining procedural standards and elucidate documentation requirements. | |
Mobility: the lifeblood of modernity and the virus that threatens to undo it The virus makes certain aspects of our normal, taken-for-granted and never questioned mobile worlds visible; but it also threatens to undo it altogether. | |
Coronavirus: A (missed) chance to rethink racism? | |
A Sudden Bankruptcy of Mobility Capital? The Paradoxical Effects of Pandemics on Human Movement Do the current disruptions to human movement reverse or rather further reinforce inequalities? | |
Rights in a time of quarantine Mass restrictions on internal movement are unlikely to violate the right to free movement but pose problems in respect of the right to liberty. | |
The Great Immobility March 17, 2020 - Public Seminar | |
Covid-19: GCC states must take careful steps to protect migrant workers March 15, 2020 - Migrant-Rights.org | |
Coronavirus: citizenship infected | |
COVID-19 outbreak response: first assessment of mobility changes in Italy following lockdown | |
From Chain Reaction to Grid Reaction: Mobilities & Restrictions during SARS & Coronavirus March 12, 2020 - Centre on Migration, Policy, and Society (COMPAS) of the University of Oxford | |
Human Rights and Coronavirus: What’s at Stake for Truth, Trust, and Democracy? Human rights protections, democracy, and multilateralism cannot be an afterthought in epidemics. |