Acceptable 'expats' versus unwanted 'Arabs': Tracing hierarchies through everyday urban practices of skilled migrant women in Istanbul
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Date
2024
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Wiley
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Abstract
This article focuses on ethnic hierarchies found within highly educated migrant women working in Istanbul traced through their everyday urban practices. It introduces the stratified and comparative results of migration and resettlement of those from the Global North and the Global South through a comprehensive analysis on their urban lives, including their social positionings, preferences of neighbourhoods and daily patterns of their use of the city. Contrary to the common conception that skilled migrants are privileged, our research reveals inequalities and discriminatory practices they face that intersect with gender, nationality and ethnicity. Our research, based on qualitative analyses of in-depth interviews along with online subjective mapping representing use of the city, also reveals that regardless of their origin and identity, almost all our participants experience verbal/physical sexual harassment or discrimination in public space in Istanbul, which forces women to produce spatial tactics of everyday life.
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Tuncer, Ezgi/0000-0003-0755-6311
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ethnic hierarchies, everyday life, expats, skilled migration, use of the city
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