The Orders and Borders of Global Inequality: Migration and Mobilities in Late Capitalism

MIGMOBS examines how global hierarchies and borders shape migration and mobility, analyzing state power and resistance across 21 countries in the context of evolving political economies and the pandemic.

Subsidie
€ 2.491.015
2024

Projectdetails

Introduction

MIGMOBS investigates how borders and hierarchies are maintained between “the West and the Rest”, even as those who are internationally mobile sometimes succeed in challenging the “birthright lottery” - i.e. that citizenship at birth most determines someone’s chances in life.

Research Questions

It asks:

  1. How does changing categorisation of subordinate populations worldwide in terms of “migration”, “free movement”, and “minorities” relate to these in- and between-country inequalities?
  2. How does late capitalism in liberal democracies advance through an ever more sophisticated differentiation and management of population – at the border as well as internal to states?

Critical Perspectives

Such work, though, has not adequately examined variation regionally, or across historical shifts in political economy: from post-war liberalism, through neoliberalism, to the era of COVID and beyond.

Objectives

MIGMOBS thus explores in unprecedented empirical breadth and detail how states reproduce sovereign power in an otherwise porous world:

  • Selecting and extracting wanted or recognised movers as “immigrants”.
  • Brutally excluding many other “migrants”.
  • Simultaneously rendering fluid and untroubling a vast range of banal “mobilities” such as tourism and business travel.

Methodology

Mapping physical, virtual and non-human mobilities, the project details demographic and social connections over time between 21 states. This quantitative comparative historical work underpins co-productive ethnographic case studies rethinking a range of archetypal “migration systems” in and from Europe, Africa, Asia and South America.

Focus on Resistance

These investigate how subordinate populations resist the categories, statuses and borders imposed upon them.

Impact of the Pandemic

With the pandemic’s impact on border crossings and transactions, new modes of classification and accreditation suggest an increasingly precise biometric control of movement and behaviour: a new phase of late capitalism I call “viral liberalism”.

Financiële details & Tijdlijn

Financiële details

Subsidiebedrag€ 2.491.015
Totale projectbegroting€ 2.491.015

Tijdlijn

Startdatum1-1-2024
Einddatum31-12-2028
Subsidiejaar2024

Partners & Locaties

Projectpartners

  • UNIVERSITY COLLEGE CORK - NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF IRELAND, CORKpenvoerder
  • EUROPEAN UNIVERSITY INSTITUTE
  • UNIVERSIDAD DE BUENOS AIRES
  • WASEDA UNIVERSITY
  • UNIVERSITY OF LEEDS

Land(en)

IrelandItalyArgentinaJapanUnited Kingdom

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