About this Research Topic
We invite new thinking on a range of questions, new and old, and on realizing various forms of justice. The aim of this Research Topic is to bring together a dynamic set of original articles that problematize various kinds of mobilities across national borders, show how it is a site of power and privilege, and detail the ways that mobility produces and reproduces various forms of injustice, local, social and global.
The Research Topic aims to bring up some of the transnational mobility patterns since the turn of the century by discussing the questions such as:
- What are the characteristics of transnational mobility in the 21 century?
- What do they mean for the maintenance of inequalities and for the reproduction of new forms of injustices global, national and local?
- What theoretical and methodological challenges do they imply?
- How does transnational mobility as a site of power and stratifications articulates with and intersect class, gender, race/ethnicity, nationality and citizenship?
We welcome submissions that critically discuss different aspects of mobility, geographically, spatially, digitally and socially, as well as intersectional approaches to mobility where many different sites of injustices and/or many different forms of mobility intersect and coincide. Papers may draw on original empirical data, or be primarily theoretical in focus.
Keywords: Nationalism, Borders, Migration, Power, Intersectionality
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.