Abstract

For migrants in Brazil, the COVID-19 global health crisis meant a considerable worsening of living conditions, with increased basic material needs. The reduction of individuals' existence to the mere search for survival had important repercussions on the activities of Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) in the country, whose work became increasingly focused on the distribution of emergency assistance for these populations. Drawing on 25 interviews with actors from CSOs, this paper unpacks the entanglement between the political and the biological aspects of migrants' lives. It argues that the pandemic brought to the fore the prominence of biological life to the detriment of migrants’ political and social lives in humanitarian responses to the health crisis. In this context, CSOs working with migrant populations in Brazil were pushed to reaffirm this dichotomy, while also contesting and reminding us that the impoverishment of migrants’ political and social lives can endanger the biological life that they meant to prioritise.

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Cite as

de Castro, F., Zapata, G. & Vera Espinoza, M. 2024, 'Migrants’ entangled socio-political and biological lives during the COVID-19 emergency in Brazil'. To be published in Third World Quarterly [Preprint]. Available at: https://eresearch.qmu.ac.uk/handle/20.500.12289/13832

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Last updated: 10 October 2024
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