Spaces of intersectional struggle:migrant women's urban citizenship amidst COVID-19 in South Korea
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.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Keywords | Covid-19,intersectionality,migration,Seoul,Uuban citizenship,coronavirus |
| Departments | Geography and Environment |
| DOI | 10.1016/j.cities.2024.104826 |
| Date Deposited | 02 Feb 2024 11:06 |
| URI | https://researchonline.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/121637 |
