ABSTRACT

This book challenges the classic – and often tacit – compartmentalization of tourism, migration, and refugee studies by exploring the intersections of these forms of spatial mobility: each prompts distinctive images and moral reactions, yet they often intertwine, overlap, and influence one another.

Tourism, migration, and exile evoke widely varying policies, diverse popular reactions, and contrasting imagery. What are the ramifications of these siloed conceptions for people on the move? To what extent do gender, class, ethnic, and racial global inequalities shape moral discourses surrounding people’s movements? This book presents 12 predominantly ethnographic case studies from around the world, and a pandemic-focused conclusion, that address these issues. In recounting and juxtaposing stories of refugees’ and migrants’ returns, marriage migrants, voluntourists, migrant retirees, migrant tourism workers and entrepreneurs, mobile investors and professionals, and refugees pursuing educational mobility, this book cultivates more nuanced insights into intersecting forms of mobility. Ultimately, this work promises to foster not only empathy but also greater resolve for forging trails toward mobility justice.

This accessibly written volume will be essential to scholars and students in critical migration, tourism, and refugee studies, including anthropologists, sociologists, human geographers, and researchers in political science and cultural studies. The book will also be of interest to non-academic professionals and general readers interested in contemporary mobilities.

chapter |30 pages

Problematizing Siloed Mobilities

Tourism, Migration, Exile

chapter 1|14 pages

Temporality and the Intersection of Tourism and Migration

Mobilities Between Cuba and Denmark

chapter 2|15 pages

Migrant, Tourist, Cuban

Identification and Belonging in Return Visits to Cuba 1

chapter 3|18 pages

Diasporic Im/mobilities

Migrants, Returnees, Deportees, Expats, Tourists, and Beyond in the Vietnamese Homeland

chapter 4|16 pages

Student Migration as an Escape from Protracted Exile

The Case of Young Sahrawi Refugees

chapter 5|18 pages

The Intersections Between Tourism and Exile

Justice Tourism in Bethlehem, Palestine

chapter 6|18 pages

Crafting Activists from Tourists

Volunteer Engagement During the “Refugee Crisis” in Serbia

chapter 9|17 pages

The Tourist, the Migrant, and the Anthropologist

A Problematic Encounter Within European Cities

chapter 10|14 pages

In and out of Brazil

Overlapping Mobilities in the Capoeira Archipelago

chapter 12|21 pages

Mobility Through Investment

Economics, Tourism, or Lifestyle Migration? Narratives of Chinese and Brazilian Golden Visa Holders in Portugal

chapter 13|14 pages

Pandemic Postscript

Tourism, Migration, and Exile