Abstract

Social remittances- the transfer of ideas, practices, and codes of behaviors- are a well-documented subject in migrant transnationalism literature and transnational family studies. However, the COVID-19 (coronavirus) outbreak has generated unprecedented regulations around the world which require widening the conceptual basis of social remittances in a state of emergency. As the pandemic progresses, most countries require civilians to follow a number of norms deemed as the “new normality,” while other countries continue to operate under their “old normality,” with minor or no restrictions. As national pandemic policy responses vary across countries, transnational families live under different regimes of “normality.” In these settings, the study of transnational families offers a valuable opportunity to examine a special type of social remittances practiced during global crises, and analyze whether the exchange of rules, practices, and ideas across national borders has any impact on re-shaping and renegotiating pandemic-coping “new normality” practices for both migrants and their families. The paper is based on 13 in-depth interviews conducted with representatives from Armenian transnational families with migrant members in Russia, the Czech Republic, or Belarus. These countries provide a backdrop for an examination of social remittances among transnational families that we term “pandemic transnationalism.” The study shows that the circulation of safety rules and “good practices” actively shapes the everyday behavior of migrants and their families, their level of perceived danger towards the coronavirus, and their practical knowledge of safety measures. The latter are often harnessed in informal collective settings despite being in conflict with the obligations and regulations of their home society.

Highlights

  • In this article, we provide an original contribution to the academic debate on social remittances as an inseparable part of transnational families’ lives during pandemics.Since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, academic literature has been increasingly enriched with studies that reveal the links between the spread of the Galstyan and Galstyan Comparative Migration StudiesCOVID-19 disease and migration

  • Based on Levitt’s (1998) original idea of social remittances, our qualitative study contributes to the migration literature by focusing on social remittances performed by transnational families in a time of pandemic

  • Our paper suggests that the COVID-19 pandemic is an important lens for reexamining remittances, as it reveals several features and “new” meanings of cross-border transactions, such as forms, characteristics, and directions of social remittances, the role of social remittances in shaping a “new normality,” as well as the context-sensitivity of social remittances in times of global crises

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Summary

Introduction

We provide an original contribution to the academic debate on social remittances as an inseparable part of transnational families’ lives during pandemics.Since the outbreak of the COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic, academic literature has been increasingly enriched with studies that reveal the links between the spread of the Galstyan and Galstyan Comparative Migration StudiesCOVID-19 disease and migration. We provide an original contribution to the academic debate on social remittances as an inseparable part of transnational families’ lives during pandemics. Transnational families are especially vulnerable under these conditions as migrants and their families left behind in homecountries find themselves embedded in systems with different approaches to coping with COVID-19. This situation provides opportunities to question the role and characteristics of social remittances in times of global crisis, as well as the extent to which the exchange of rules, practices, and ideas across national borders re-shapes and renegotiates pandemic-coping “new normality” practices for both migrants and their families

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