ABSTRACT

Mobile Citizenship addresses the crucial question of how mobility reconfigures citizenship. Engaging with debates on transnationalism, citizenship, and lifestyle migration, the book draws on ethnographic research and interview material collected among retired lifestyle migrants moving south from Germany to Turkey to explore the practices and narratives of these privileged migrants. Revealing the ways in which these migrants relate to their old homes and to their new places, the author examines the social, political, and spatial dimensions of citizenship and belonging and argues that citizenship is key to understanding the privileges of transnational lifestyles. By taking up discussions emanating from studies on other privileged lifestyle migrations—around social welfare and well-being, social participation, and affective belonging, as well as class and racialized privileges—the book exposes particular comparative value and showcases similarities and differences across this emerging type of migration. Mobile Citizenship thus shows how citizenship allows for mobility, resources, and privilege yet is also replete with limitations and ambivalences. The book brings together perspectives on citizenship, space, and privilege and will appeal to social scientists with interests in lifestyle migration and citizenship and their interconnections with global and social inequalities.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

Transnational lifestyles and mobile citizenship

part I|71 pages

Citizenship, space, and ageing

chapter 1|26 pages

Citizenship in the age of mobility

chapter 2|12 pages

Reverse spatialities

chapter 3|31 pages

Locating retirement lifestyle migration

part II|80 pages

Privileges of citizenship

part III|23 pages

Mobile citizenship in insecure times

chapter 6|13 pages

Paradise lost?

chapter 7|8 pages

Conclusion