Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
Spaces of intersectional struggle: Migrant women's urban citizenship amidst COVID-19 in South Korea
Abstract In this paper, I argue that intersectionality can benefit the study of migrant urban citizenship and that migrants' legal status affects their potential for urban citizenships. These arguments are based on life story interviews I conducted with Mongolian labour migrant women (both documented and undocumented) living and working in Seoul during the COVID-19 pandemic. Drawing from this data, I first discuss the mutual relationship between COVID-19 regulations and the specific urban spaces they affected, and second, how migrant women navigated this relationship. In practice, I categorise these pandemic-driven experiences into three specific types of spaces – spaces of escape, spaces of fear, and spaces of (potential) discrimination – which I analyse through the lenses of gender, class, and racialisation. In conclusion, I call for future research on migrant urban citizenship to critically consider the role of legal status in migrants' embodied processes of urban citizenship-making and investigate how underlying structural social and power relations shape these embodied processes. Reformulating the concept of urban citizenship in a way that explicitly informs policy making and fosters migrants' embodied experiences of urban citizenship is also needed.
Highlights Intersectionality can benefit the study of migrant urban citizenship. Migrants' legal status affects their potential for urban citizenship. COVID-19 regulations transformed urban spaces in Seoul into spaces of escape, fear, or discrimination. Migrant urban citizenship needs to be reconceptualised into a policy-oriented approach.
Spaces of intersectional struggle: Migrant women's urban citizenship amidst COVID-19 in South Korea
Abstract In this paper, I argue that intersectionality can benefit the study of migrant urban citizenship and that migrants' legal status affects their potential for urban citizenships. These arguments are based on life story interviews I conducted with Mongolian labour migrant women (both documented and undocumented) living and working in Seoul during the COVID-19 pandemic. Drawing from this data, I first discuss the mutual relationship between COVID-19 regulations and the specific urban spaces they affected, and second, how migrant women navigated this relationship. In practice, I categorise these pandemic-driven experiences into three specific types of spaces – spaces of escape, spaces of fear, and spaces of (potential) discrimination – which I analyse through the lenses of gender, class, and racialisation. In conclusion, I call for future research on migrant urban citizenship to critically consider the role of legal status in migrants' embodied processes of urban citizenship-making and investigate how underlying structural social and power relations shape these embodied processes. Reformulating the concept of urban citizenship in a way that explicitly informs policy making and fosters migrants' embodied experiences of urban citizenship is also needed.
Highlights Intersectionality can benefit the study of migrant urban citizenship. Migrants' legal status affects their potential for urban citizenship. COVID-19 regulations transformed urban spaces in Seoul into spaces of escape, fear, or discrimination. Migrant urban citizenship needs to be reconceptualised into a policy-oriented approach.
Spaces of intersectional struggle: Migrant women's urban citizenship amidst COVID-19 in South Korea
Sottini, Martina Vittoria (Autor:in)
Cities ; 147
23.01.2024
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
Spaces of intersectional struggle: migrant women's urban citizenship amidst COVID-19 in South Korea
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