“Switzerland Doesn’t Want Me” - Work, Precarity and Emotions for Mobile Professionals’ Partners
Date issued
April 1, 2019
In
Migration Letters
Vol
2
No
16
From page
207
To page
2017
Reviewed by peer
1
Subjects
migration precarity emotions mobile professionals partners
Abstract
A wide range of professions demands mobility as a requisite for “excellence”, success and “good performance”. At the same time, more precarious and flexible conditions, ranging from unemployment, to
temporary, free-lance and self-employed occupations, now characterize the mobile trajectories of a large number of professionals and their partners. What is the emotional cost of these conditions in mobility? How
do mobile professionals’ partners feel and deal with feeling rules regarding unemployment and job search when moving? The article examines the case of Switzerland, by exploring the experience of mobile professionals’ partners.
temporary, free-lance and self-employed occupations, now characterize the mobile trajectories of a large number of professionals and their partners. What is the emotional cost of these conditions in mobility? How
do mobile professionals’ partners feel and deal with feeling rules regarding unemployment and job search when moving? The article examines the case of Switzerland, by exploring the experience of mobile professionals’ partners.
Publication type
journal article
