Human Security and the Governmentality of Neo-Liberal Mobility: A Feminist Perspective
July 2006
Research Paper
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Transnational migration and its implications for human security as a policy field constitute one of the most complex issues of our time. Current experiences of displacement and security spans between a cyber world characterized by hyper mobility of finance, technology, information and the ‘cosmopolitan’ values of a ‘flexible citizenship’ (Ong, 1999) to the world of human trafficking and smuggling of migrants and refugees as a mode of mobility adopted by people who cross borders on foot, by boat, trucks and planes who are often abandoned to die when arrangements break down (Eschbach/Hagan/Rodriguez, 2001; El-Cherkeh/Hella, 2004). The extant legal vacuum reflects unresolved conflicts of interest at different levels and poses a great challenge to the right to mobility as an expression of the liberal ideal of individual liberty.
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- gender
- migration
- society
- development
- market
- women
- governmentality
- neo-liberal
- economy
- truong
- policy
- perspective
- paper
- trafficking
- study
- right
- politic
- family