病毒边界时代的自治与斗争:2019冠状病毒病期间穿越南美安第斯山脉的委内瑞拉人

IF 3 1区 社会学 Q1 GEOGRAPHY
Mauricio Palma-Gutiérrez
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文详细介绍了在2019冠状病毒病紧急情况下,委内瑞拉移民在安第斯山脉跨境流动走廊的经历。它侧重于他们碎片化旅程的不同特征,以追踪在当代移民中争取自治的斗争潜力。从概念上讲,它扩展了Nicholas De Genova的“病毒边界”,探索移民在最近以公共卫生的名义扩大的暴力、民族主义边境管制浪潮中重新定向、重新想象和重塑其轨迹的方式。文章认为,为了应对COVID-19管理的后果,委内瑞拉移民做出了与他们获得社会和物质资源的差异化机会有关的流动选择,他们陷入了普遍存在的种族化、阶级化和性别化的社会结构中。与此同时,在与covid -19相关的民族主义(重新)边界尝试相反的碎片化旅程中,移民的斗争实现了自治。有人认为,随着病毒边界的遗留问题变得更加明显,在大流行后的排他性边界制度中,自主和斗争仍然是形成流动性的关键。©2023作者。由Taylor & Francis Group, LLC授权出版。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Autonomy and Struggle in Times of Viral Borders: Venezuelans Across the South American Andes During Covid-19
This article takes a close look at Venezuelan migrants' experiences throughout the Andean corridor of cross-border mobility during the COVID-19 emergency. It focuses on the differentiated characteristics of their fragmented journeys to trace the potential of struggles in reclaiming autonomy in contemporary migration. Conceptually, it expands on Nicholas De Genova's ‘viral borders' to explore the ways migrants rechannelled, reimagined, and remade their trajectories amid the recent wave of violent, nationalist border controls, expanded in the name of public health. The article argues that, to cope with the consequences of COVID-19 management, Venezuelan migrants made mobility choices related to their differentiated access to social and material resources, enmeshed in prevailing racialised, classed, and gendered social structures. Meanwhile, migrant struggles enabled autonomy amid fragmented journeys opposite Covid-19-related attempts of nationalist (re)bordering. It is suggested that, as legacies of viral borders become more evident, autonomy and struggle remain key in shaping mobility amid the exclusionary post-pandemical border regime. © 2023 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
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来源期刊
Geopolitics
Geopolitics Multiple-
CiteScore
7.60
自引率
10.30%
发文量
50
期刊介绍: The study of geopolitics has undergone a major renaissance during the past decade. Addressing a gap in the published periodical literature, this journal seeks to explore the theoretical implications of contemporary geopolitics and geopolitical change with particular reference to territorial problems and issues of state sovereignty . Multidisciplinary in its scope, Geopolitics includes all aspects of the social sciences with particular emphasis on political geography, international relations, the territorial aspects of political science and international law. The journal seeks to maintain a healthy balance between systemic and regional analysis.
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