Abstract

How does spatial mobility influence social mobility and vice versa? Often, the ‘objective’ structural positions on the one hand, and the ‘subjective’ definition of social positions on the other hand, are not considered together. Yet this is necessary in order to gauge the consequences of mobility trajectories reaching across borders. This framing editorial asks how we can study the interplay of perceptions of one’s own social position and one’s objective social position to better understand how spatial mobility influences social mobility and vice versa. In short, this means an exploration of the nexus of spatial mobility and social mobility. Exploring that nexus requires attention to objective social positions, subjective social positioning strategies, transnational approaches to the study of social positions and self-positioning, and social boundary theory. Overall, the complexity of the nexus between social and spatial mobilities calls for a multifaceted research approach that covers various levels of analysis. Some of the contributions feature a mixed-methods approach that allows drawing a multifaceted picture of the interrelation between the perceptions of social positions and their structural features.

Highlights

  • Migration and Unequal Positions in a Transnational PerspectiveThomas Faist 1, Joanna J

  • By combining perspectives on social positions and social positioning, the research presented in this issue yields important insights into the processes whereby social inequality is linked to the creation ofnational social spaces

  • The contributions approach the issue of spatial mobility and social position(ing) within transnational spaces with distinct social hierarchies within which people are positioned according to different heterogeneities, such as the degree of mobility, transnationality, ethnicity, gender, and class

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Summary

Introduction

Migration and Unequal Positions in a Transnational PerspectiveThomas Faist 1, Joanna J. 1. Focusing on the Nexus between Social and Spatial Mobility: Ways to Conceptualise Social Inequality in Transnational Spaces

Results
Conclusion

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