Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5073316 | Geoforum | 2017 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
This paper explores how migration infrastructure conditions migrant mobilities within receiving states. The paper examines two infrastructural case studies, language testing and housing markets, in relation to Asian 'middling' migrants, that is, the relatively educated and skilled but not elite, who arrive in Australia on temporary visas. The analysis highlights the interplays and dependencies of different 'logics of operation' (Xiang and Lindquist, 2014) of infrastructure in relation to these migrants' status mobilities and housing mobilities within the receiving society. The paper draws on data from in-depth narrative interviews with migrants to also understand how infrastructure produces perceptions and meaning-making around the migration process. This analysis reveals that, in this empirical context, migration infrastructure produces varied kinds of spatio-temporal insecurity as much as it mediates mobility.
Related Topics
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Authors
Shanthi Robertson,