Project

This project takes a challenge-led, transnational and decolonial approach to examining the gendered impact of global environmental, health, political and economic crises on women’s geographical and social (im)mobility.

Involving a team of twelve researchers from across the Humanities, Social and Behavioural Sciences, this project investigates how the dramatic societal shifts caused by moments of crisis provoke, inform or prevent the local, national and transnational movement of women.

  • How do the dramatic societal shifts caused by moments of global crisis provoke, inform or prevent the local, national and transnational movement of women?
  • How are women’s experiences of (im)mobility during crises underscored by intersections such as race, class, nation, sexuality, language and health? 
  • How do these issues play out in distinct cultural, sociological, geopolitical, judicial and behavioural contexts?

The research draws on digital, legal and ethnographic case studies, cultural texts and quantitative data, with scholars from Law, Business, Psychology, Sociology, Computer Science and Literary and Cultural Studies comparing case studies from across the ‘Global South’ and the ‘Global North’. 

The project is embedded in the University of Surrey Centre for Mobilities and Literature and Culture and the interdisciplinary Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences' Centre for Sex, Gender and Sexualities.