Abstract

The restrictions to international travel during the COVID-19 pandemic have posed significant barriers to transnational family life. This paper focusses on the negotiation of familial obligations of young EU nationals aged 14-25 living in Britain. We examine how care practices were reconfigured within families, as forced immobility, absence and loss became part of transnational family life. Young people’s agency was activated to engage in desirable circulations of care, while also engaging in acts of citizenship locally that had a care dimension. Many young people contributed to local initiatives of caring for others, such as mutual aid initiatives and local groups extending care practices to non-familial relations. We examine thus the range of care receiving and care giving practices and resources involved, including material resources, time, affection and sharing information. These practices involved family members locally or at a distance, but also non-familial relations, to shape new constellations of care.

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Cite as

Sime, D., Käkelä, E. & Behrens, S. 2024, 'New constellations of care: between local and transnational care practices of young Europeans living in the UK during the (im)mobility regimes of a pandemic', Ethnic and Racial Studies.. https://doi.org/10.1080/01419870.2024.2351631

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Last updated: 17 May 2024
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