This article analyses how mobile technology impacts on irregular migrants' journeys. It is based on trajectory ethnography with 11 Afghan, Iranian and Syrian migrants whom the first author met in Turkey and Greece in the spring of 2015. These migrants were followed (partly digitally) to Serbia, Hungary, Germany, Sweden and the Netherlands. We argue that the method of trajectory ethnography is a useful tool that allows us to understand how mobile technology shapes and facilitate parts of the journey - like, for example, decisions on routes and modes of travel, final destinations and the financing of irregular migration. This methodology leads to a more nuanced understanding of irregular migration because it enables us to capture the complex ...
This case reflects on the use of mobile methods in a study of environmental migration. Environmental...
Migration has long been used as a strategy for livelihood diversification in rural, subsistence comm...
With the aim at grasping “glocal” nexuses as much as different human experiences of movement (migrat...
This research examines the role of smartphones in refugees’ journeys. It traces the risks and possib...
This research examines the role of smartphones in refugees’ journeys. It traces the risks and possib...
This article examines the intersections between migrants’ trajectories and digital technologies by a...
The article builds upon critical border studies for the study of the European migration crisis that ...
This paper explores the role of smartphones in facilitating the journeys of predominantly young, mal...
In West and Northern Africa, mobile phone coverage has been expanding parallely to increased attempt...
This article presents results from in-depth interviews with 18 newly arrived refugees in 2016, focus...
Aim. This article presents an ethnographic exploration of technology use among migrants. The main qu...
This paper interrogates how the social networks and the networking of migrants, and through that the...
Over the past decade, an expanding literature has explored the ways in which refugees rely on mobile...
The use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) and social media became a key character...
Ingrid Boas illustrates how in Bangladesh people respond to extreme levels of climate variability ar...
This case reflects on the use of mobile methods in a study of environmental migration. Environmental...
Migration has long been used as a strategy for livelihood diversification in rural, subsistence comm...
With the aim at grasping “glocal” nexuses as much as different human experiences of movement (migrat...
This research examines the role of smartphones in refugees’ journeys. It traces the risks and possib...
This research examines the role of smartphones in refugees’ journeys. It traces the risks and possib...
This article examines the intersections between migrants’ trajectories and digital technologies by a...
The article builds upon critical border studies for the study of the European migration crisis that ...
This paper explores the role of smartphones in facilitating the journeys of predominantly young, mal...
In West and Northern Africa, mobile phone coverage has been expanding parallely to increased attempt...
This article presents results from in-depth interviews with 18 newly arrived refugees in 2016, focus...
Aim. This article presents an ethnographic exploration of technology use among migrants. The main qu...
This paper interrogates how the social networks and the networking of migrants, and through that the...
Over the past decade, an expanding literature has explored the ways in which refugees rely on mobile...
The use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) and social media became a key character...
Ingrid Boas illustrates how in Bangladesh people respond to extreme levels of climate variability ar...
This case reflects on the use of mobile methods in a study of environmental migration. Environmental...
Migration has long been used as a strategy for livelihood diversification in rural, subsistence comm...
With the aim at grasping “glocal” nexuses as much as different human experiences of movement (migrat...