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Shock mobilities during moments of acute uncertainty

Shock mobilities during moments of acute uncertainty
Shock mobilities during moments of acute uncertainty
The COVID-19 pandemic and interventions addressing it raise important questions about human mobility that have geopolitical implications. This forum uses mobility and immobility during the pandemic as lenses onto the ways that routinised state power reacts to acute uncertainties, as well as how these reactions impact politics and societies. Specifically, we propose the concept of “shock mobility” as migratory routines radically reconfigured: emergency flights from epicentres, mass repatriations, lockdowns, quarantines. Patterns of shock mobility and immobility are not new categories of movement, but rather are significant alterations to the timing, duration, intensity, and relations among existing movements. Many of these alterations have been induced by governments’ reactions to the pandemic in both migrant-sending and receiving contexts, which can be especially consequential for migrants in and from the Global South. Our interventions explore these processes by highlighting experiences of Afghans and Kurds along Iran’s borders, Western Africans in Europe, Filipino workers, irregular Bangladeshis in Qatar, Central Americans travelling northwards via Mexico, and rural-urban migrants in India. In total, we argue that tracing shocks’ dynamics in a comparative manner provides an analytical means for assessing the long-term implications of the pandemic, building theories about how and why any particular post-crisis world emerges as it does, and paving the way for future empirical work.
1632-1657
Xiang, Biao
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Allen, William L.
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Khosravi, Shahram
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Kringelbach, Hélène Neveu
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Ortiga, Yasmin Y.
906bee08-46de-4fe8-9c0e-0830158f35e1
Liao, Karen Anne S.
7590c3a1-f815-447e-9994-a655cab9e7bc
Cuéllar, Jorge E.
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Momen, Lamea
0711a58f-d4b7-42f0-940a-599edea52e85
Deshingkar, Priya
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Naik, Mukta
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Xiang, Biao
005d74d1-5551-4751-a4aa-1d103f7924f8
Allen, William L.
f0d4731a-81c1-4886-b11c-74dfa412bb97
Khosravi, Shahram
b6cf716f-6946-498f-bb6c-17ad096c93cd
Kringelbach, Hélène Neveu
149acc47-b51b-4a8d-b16a-f40042677b44
Ortiga, Yasmin Y.
906bee08-46de-4fe8-9c0e-0830158f35e1
Liao, Karen Anne S.
7590c3a1-f815-447e-9994-a655cab9e7bc
Cuéllar, Jorge E.
398ba7e0-834b-49b8-bad9-0d92c70d6f47
Momen, Lamea
0711a58f-d4b7-42f0-940a-599edea52e85
Deshingkar, Priya
096774a5-6699-4bf1-98b4-31d76cdf7b26
Naik, Mukta
46118a07-08d2-4369-9042-96c095380474

Xiang, Biao, Allen, William L., Khosravi, Shahram, Kringelbach, Hélène Neveu, Ortiga, Yasmin Y., Liao, Karen Anne S., Cuéllar, Jorge E., Momen, Lamea, Deshingkar, Priya and Naik, Mukta (2023) Shock mobilities during moments of acute uncertainty. Geopolitics, 28 (4), 1632-1657. (doi:10.1080/14650045.2022.2091314).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic and interventions addressing it raise important questions about human mobility that have geopolitical implications. This forum uses mobility and immobility during the pandemic as lenses onto the ways that routinised state power reacts to acute uncertainties, as well as how these reactions impact politics and societies. Specifically, we propose the concept of “shock mobility” as migratory routines radically reconfigured: emergency flights from epicentres, mass repatriations, lockdowns, quarantines. Patterns of shock mobility and immobility are not new categories of movement, but rather are significant alterations to the timing, duration, intensity, and relations among existing movements. Many of these alterations have been induced by governments’ reactions to the pandemic in both migrant-sending and receiving contexts, which can be especially consequential for migrants in and from the Global South. Our interventions explore these processes by highlighting experiences of Afghans and Kurds along Iran’s borders, Western Africans in Europe, Filipino workers, irregular Bangladeshis in Qatar, Central Americans travelling northwards via Mexico, and rural-urban migrants in India. In total, we argue that tracing shocks’ dynamics in a comparative manner provides an analytical means for assessing the long-term implications of the pandemic, building theories about how and why any particular post-crisis world emerges as it does, and paving the way for future empirical work.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 25 July 2022
Published date: 8 August 2023

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 500015
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500015
PURE UUID: 4e4d1763-9176-412a-8068-ebd53b55836f
ORCID for William L. Allen: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3185-1468

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Date deposited: 11 Apr 2025 16:40
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:43

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Contributors

Author: Biao Xiang
Author: William L. Allen ORCID iD
Author: Shahram Khosravi
Author: Hélène Neveu Kringelbach
Author: Yasmin Y. Ortiga
Author: Karen Anne S. Liao
Author: Jorge E. Cuéllar
Author: Lamea Momen
Author: Priya Deshingkar
Author: Mukta Naik

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