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Funded Projects › H2020

MigrWorkers · The Race, Class and Gender of Transnational Urban Labour: Romanian Workers in the Cities of London and NYC

H2020Status: CLOSED1 September 201531 August 2017EU funding €183,455Call H2020-MSCA-IF-2014

The workings of globalization depend on international labor migration, a phenomenon that is hardly recent but that is,instead, embedded in histories of colonialism, decolonization and neocolonization, divergent conditions of democracy,totalitarianism, militarism and exploitation, as well as in persistent structures of economic disparity among the formalcolonial powers and the decolonized world. Contemporary labor migration—the flows of people in search of labor crossingnational boundaries, deeply impacts and transforms the social, economic, political, cognitive and affective landscapes ofcontemporary life. This project will consider these transformations by examining the transnational migrant labor of workersfrom Romania such as it unfolds at two central sites of global capitalism, London-U.K. and New York-U.S. The research willfeature an historical analysis of the immigrant Romanian labor presence at these sites, while its time frame covers theinterval starting in 1989 up to the present day. While labor migration has been a subject of interest for economists, politicaltheorists, geographers, anthropologists and cultural theorists alike, its relevance to affective theory and neoliberal critiqueshave only recently been addressed. My project seeks to address an analytic gap that refers to the affective dimension ofmigrational labor by considering not only the economic, political, and historical contexts, but also the impact that immigrants’transnational journeys in search for work and their landing in new spaces have on their intimate lives alongside co-nationalsas well as alongside other dwellers in the global city. The research project will draw upon recent global changes, moreprecisely on the global economic crisis, the continued neoliberalization of economies and the pressures towardssecuritization that affect the cities of London and New York and thus implicitly impact on the lives of immigrant laborers.

Consortium · 2 organisations

coordinator

UNIVERSITY OF STRATHCLYDE

UK · €152,879

participant

LONDON SOUTH BANK UNIVERSITY LBG

UK · €30,576

Research fields

View the official record on CORDIS →

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