Placing regimes of mobilities beyond state-centred perspectives and international mobility: the case of marketplaces
Author(s)
Jónsson, Gunvor
Joris Schapendonk
Van Eck, Emil
Date issued
2023
In
Mobilities
From page
1
To page
16
Reviewed by peer
true
Subjects
Regimes of mobility marketplaces inequalities nation state logic Immobilities places
Abstract
Scholars have scrutinized the state-centered and sedentarist foundations of social sciences that pitch ‘mobilities’ against ‘places’ by arguing that places and mobilities always co-constitute each other. Contributing to this debate, this article deploys the concept of ‘regimes of mobilities’ to study how mobilities are not only ‘placed’, but also entangled in, and shaped by, different power systems. By regimes of mobilities we understand all the mechanisms that differentiate mobilities into categories and hierarchies. This article argues that linking the concept of regimes of mobilities to the study of places can help illuminate how the ordering and differentiation of diverse forms of mobilities play out in the everyday realities of particular places. We empirically demonstrate this argument through the study of outdoor markets in three European countries: the United Kingdom, Switzerland and the Netherlands. We delineate different regimes of mobilities that together shape both access to, and the production of, markets. We conclude that the concept of regimes of mobilities helps to identify this intersection of multiple systems of rules, regulations and norms. Hence, the concepts allows one to direct attention systematically to the different power systems that affect the supposedly ‘mundane’ mobilities that constitute place and the skills required to navigate the related dynamics.
Later version
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17450101.2023.2218591
Publication type
journal article
File(s)![Thumbnail Image]()
Loading...
Name
Placing regimes of mobilities beyond state centred perspectives and international mobility the case of marketplaces.pdf
Type
Main Article
Size
1.96 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
