Abstract
This chapter provides a brief overview of the research that inspired Marxism and Migration. The analysis situates the collection within various Marxian traditions and lays out the material conditions that coalesce into displacement, movement, and mobility. The chapter provides both a rationale for the collection and a foundation for thinking through the realities of struggle.
Access this chapter
Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout
Purchases are for personal use only
Similar content being viewed by others
Notes
- 1.
Stories from migrant women detailing sexual and organized violence that we heard in our research were presented in a dance project called No Woman’s Land. For more information, see https://www.jaberidt.com/portfolio_page/nowomansland/.
- 2.
See Whitehead (2016) for a discussion on primary and primitive accumulation.
References
Aguilar, D. D. (2015). Intersectionality. In S. Mojab (Ed.), Marxism and feminism (pp. 203–220). Zed Books.
Akkerman, M. (2018). Expanding the fortress: The policies, the profiteers, and the people shaped by EU’s border externalisation programme. Transnational Institute. https://www.tni.org/en/publication/expanding-the-fortress
Allman, P. (2010). Critical education against global capitalism: Karl Marx and Revolutionary Critical Education. Brill
Amnesty International. (2014). “My sleep is my break”: Exploitation of migrant domestic workers in Qatar. Amnesty.org. https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/mde22/004/2014/en/
Amnesty International. (2021). “In the prime of their lives”: Qatar’s failure to investigate, remedy, and prevent migrant workers’ deaths. Amnesty.org. https://www.amnesty.nl/content/uploads/2021/08/MDE-22.4614.2021-In-the-prime-of-their-lives-migrant-worker-deaths-in-Qatar_FINAL.pdf?x53918
Anderson, B. (2010). Mobilizing migrants, making citizens: Migrant domestic workers as political agents. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 33(1), 60–74. https://doi.org/10.1080/01419870903023660
Anderson, B. (2019). New directions in migration studies: Towards methodological de-nationalism. Comparative Migration Studies, 7(1), 1–13. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40878-019-0140-8
Balibar, E. (2010). At the borders of citizenship: A democracy in translation? European Journal of Social Theory, 13(3), 315–322. https://doi.org/10.1177/1368431010371751
Bannerji, H. (2000). The dark side of the nation. Canadian Scholars’ Press and Women’s Press.
Bannerji, H. (2003). The tradition of sociology and the sociology of tradition. International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, 16(2), 157–173.
Bannerji, H. (2005). Building from Marx: Reflections on class and race. Social Justice, 32(4), 144–160.
Bannerji. (2020). The ideological condition: Selected essays on history, race, and gender. Brill.
Betts, A., & Collier, P. (2015, October 19). Help refugees help themselves. https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/levant/2015-10-20/help-refugees-help-themselves
Binford, A. L. (2019). Assessing temporary foreign worker programs through the prism of Canada’s Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program: Can they be reformed or should they be eliminated? Dialectical Anthropology, 43(4), 347–366. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10624-019-09573-2
Brambilla, C. (2015). Exploring the critical potential of the borderscapes concept. Geopolitics, 20(1), 14–34.
Carastathis, A., Kouri-Towe, N., Mahrouse, G., & Whitley, L. (2018a). Intersectional feminist interventions in the “refugee crisis” introduction [Special issue]. Refuge, 34(1), 3–15.
Carastathis, A., Spathopoulou, A., & Tsilimpounidi, M. (2018). Crisis, what crisis? Immigrants, refugees, and invisible struggles. Refuge, 34(1), 29–38.
Carpenter, S. (2018). Learning, labour, and value: Pedagogies of work and migration. International Studies in Sociology of Education, 27(2–3), 239–254. https://doi.org/10.1080/09620214.2018.1425102
Carpenter, S. (2021). The ideology of civic engagement: Americorps, politics, and pedagogy. State University of New York Press.
Carpenter, S., & Mojab, S. (2017). Youth as/in crisis: Young people, public policy, and the politics of learning. Sense Publishing.
Casas-Cortes, M., Cobarrubias, S., & Pickles, J. (2016). Good neighbours make good fences: Seahorse operations, border externalization, and extra-territoriality. European Urban and Regional Studies, 23(3), 231–251.
Castellanos, M. B. (2010). A return to servitude: Maya migration and the tourist trade in Cancún. University of Minnesota Press.
Castles, S. (2007). Twenty-first-century migration as a challenge to sociology. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 33(3), 351–371.
Chan, J., Selden, M., & Ngai, P. (2020). Dying for an iPhone: Apple, Foxconn, and The Lives of China’s Workers. Haymarket Books.
Choudry, A. & Smith, A. A. (2016). Unfree labour? Struggles of migrant and immigrant workers in Canada. PM Press.
Cowen, D. (2014). The deadly life of logistics: Mapping violence in global trade. University of Minnesota Press.
Cross, H. (2020). Migration beyond capitalism. Wiley.
De Genova, N. (2013). Spectacles of migrant ‘illegality’: the scene of exclusion, the obscene of inclusion. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 36(7), 1180–1198.
De Genova, N. (2017). Introduction. The borders of “Europe” and the European question. In The borders of “Europe” (pp. 1–36). Duke University Press.
De Genova, N., Garelli, G., & Tazzioli, M. (2018). Autonomy of asylum? The autonomy of migration undoing the refugee crisis script. The South Atlantic Quarterly, 117(2), 239–265. https://doi.org/10.1215/00382876-4374823
Estes, N., & Dunbar-Ortiz, R. (2020, July 01). Examining the wreckage. Monthly Review. https://monthlyreview.org/2020/07/01/examining-the-wreckage/
Federici, S. (2004). Caliban and the witch. Autonomedia.
Federici, S. (2018). Re-enchanting the world: Feminism and the politics of the commons. PM Press.
Ferguson, S. (2016). Intersectionality and social-reproduction feminisms: Toward an integrative ontology. Historical Materialism, 24(2), 38–60.
Ferguson, S., & McNally, D. (2015, October 31). Social reproduction beyond intersectionality: An interview. Viewpoint Magazine, 5.
Grandin, G. (2019). The end of the myth: From the frontier to the border wall in the mind of America. Metropolitan Books.
Gutiérrez Rodríguez, E. (2018). The coloniality of migration and the “Refugee Crisis”: On the asylum-migration nexus, the Transatlantic White European settler colonialism-migration and racial capitalism. Refuge: Canada’s Journal on Refugees 34(16–28).
Hanieh, A. (2013). Lineages of revolt: Issues of contemporary capitalism in the Middle East. Haymarket Books.
Hassanpour, A. (2015). Nation and nationalism. In S. Mojab (Ed.), Marxism and feminism (pp. 239–258). Zed Books.
Horne, G. (2018). The apocalypse of settler colonialism: The roots of slavery, white supremacy, and capitalism in seventeenth century North America and the Caribbean. Monthly Review Press.
Horne, G. (2020). The dawning of the apocalypse: The roots of slavery, white supremacy, settler colonialism, and capitalism in the long sixteenth century. Monthly Review Press.
Hyndman, J., & Giles, W. (2011). Waiting for what? The feminization of asylum in protracted situations. Gender, Place & Culture, 18(3), 361–379.
International Organization for Migration. (2019). World migration report 2020. IOM. https://publications.iom.int/system/files/pdf/wmr_2020.pdf
Jeandesboz, J., & Pallister-Wilkins, P. (2014). Crisis, enforcement, and control at the EU borders. In A. Lindley (Ed.), Crisis and migration: Critical perspectives (pp. 115–135). Routledge.
Jones, R. (2012). Border walls: Security and the war on terror in the United States. Zed Books.
Jones, R. (2016). Violent borders: Refugees and the right to move. Verso Books.
Karakayali, S. (2018). Volunteers: From solidarity to integration. South Atlantic Quarterly, 117(2), 313–331.
Karuka, M. (2019). Empire’s tracks: Indigenous nations, Chinese workers, and the transcontinental railroad (1st ed.). University of California Press.
Kelley, R. D. (2017). The rest of us: Rethinking settler and native. American Quarterly, 69(2), 267–276.
Kundnani, A. (2012). Multiculturalism and its discontents: Left, Right and liberal. European Journal of Cultural Studies, 15(2), 155–166.
Lenin, V. I. (2012). Essential works of Lenin: “What is to be done?” and other writings. Courier Corporation.
Lewis, H. (2016). The politics of everybody: Feminism, queer theory, and Marxism at the intersection. Zed Books.
Linebaugh, P. (2003). The London hanged: Crime and civil society in the eighteenth century (2nd ed.). Verso.
Linebaugh, P., & Rediker, M. (2000). The many-headed hydra: Sailors, slaves, commoners, and the hidden history of the revolutionary Atlantic. Beacon Press.
Lockman, Z. (2010). Contending visions of the Middle East: The history and politics of Orientalism (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press.
Marfleet, P. (2013). Explorations in a foreign land: States, refugees, and the problem of history. Refugee Survey Quarterly, 32(2), 14–34.
Marx, K. (1975). Letters: Marx to Sigfrid Meyer and August Vogt 9 April 1870. https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1870/letters/70_04_09.htm
Maynard, R. (2017). Policing Black lives: State violence in Canada from slavery to the present. Fernwood Publishing.
McGuirk, S., & Pine. A. (Eds.). (2021). Asylum for sale: Profit and protest in the migration industry. PM Press.
McNally, D. (2020). Blood and money: War, slavery, finance, and empire. Haymarket Books.
Mezzadra, S., & Neilson, B. (2013). Border as method, or, the multiplication of labor. Duke Press.
Mitropoulos, A. (2006). Autonomy, recognition, movement. Commoner (11 Spring/Summer), 5–14.
Mojab, S., & Carpenter, S. (2019). Marxism, feminism, and “intersectionality.” Journal of Labor and Society, 22(2), 275–282.
Mojab, S., & Carpenter, S. (2020). Marxist feminist pedagogies of fascism and anti-fascism. New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2020(165), 129–141. https://doi.org/10.1002/ace.20373
Nail, T. (2015). Migrant cosmopolitanism. Public Affairs Quarterly, 29(2), 187–199.
Ng, R. (1995). Multiculturalism as ideology: A textual analysis. In M. Campbell & A. Manicom (Eds.), Knowledge, experience, and ruling relations: Studies in the social organization of knowledge (pp. 35–48). University of Toronto Press.
Nyberg-Sørensen, N., Van Hear, N., & Engberg-Pedersen, P. (2002). The migration–development nexus: Evidence and policy options. International Migration, 40(5), 49–73.
Ollman, B. (1993). Dialectical investigations. Routledge.
Paik, A. N. (2020). Bans, walls, raids, sanctuary: Understanding U.S. immigration for the twenty-first century (1st ed., Vol. 12). University of California Press. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv11hpsmj
Poster, W., & Mirchandani, K. (2016). Enactments of nationhood in transnational call centers (pp. 3–32). In K. Mirchandani & W. Poster (Ed.), Borders in service: Enactments of nationhood in transnational call centres. University of Toronto Press.
Ramsaroop, C. (2016). The case for unemployment insurance benefits for migrant agricultural workers in Canada (pp. 105–122). In A. Choudry & A. Smith (Eds.), Unfree labour? Struggles of migrant and immigrant workers in Canada. PM Press.
Reuters. (2021, October 9). Shooting in Libya detention center after migrant raids. Reuters. https://www.reuters.com/world/africa/shooting-libyan-migrant-detention-centre-kills-least-five-iom-says-2021-10-08/
Ritchie, G. (2018). Civil society, the state, and private sponsorship: The political economy of refugee resettlement. International Journal of Lifelong Learning, 37(6), 663–675. https://doi.org/10.1080/02601370.2018.1513429
Ritchie, G. (2021). Migration as class struggle: Refugee youth, work rights, and solidarity. Labor History, 1–13. https://doi.org/10.1080/0023656X.2021.2023119
Ritchie, G., & Mojab, S. (2019). The ideology of democracy/dictatorship as youth migrate. Globalizations, Societies, and Education, 17(4), 548–560. https://doi.org/10.1080/14767724.2019.1571404
Rodriguez, R. M. (2010). Migrants for export: How the Philippine state brokers labor to the world. University of Minnesota Press.
Salazar Parreñas, R. (2001). Servants of globalization: Women, migration, and domestic work. Stanford University Press.
Salazar Parreñas, R. (2006). Children of global migration: Transnational families and gendered woes. Ateneo De Manila University Press.
Sassen, S. (2010). A savage sorting of winners and losers: Contemporary versions of primitive accumulation. Globalizations, 7(1–2), 23–50.
Schiller, N. G. (2009). A global perspective on migration and development. Social Analysis, 53(3), 14–37.
Sharma, N. (2019). Dispossessing citizenship. In R. Jones (Ed.), Open borders: In defense of free movement (pp. 77–88). University of Georgia Press.
Smith, D. (1999). Writing the social: Critique, theory, and investigations. University of Toronto Press.
Smith, L. T. (2012). Decolonizing methodologies: Research and indigenous peoples (2nd ed.). Zed Books.
Tazzioli, M., & Garelli, G. (2020). Containment beyond detention: The hotspot system and disrupted migration movements across Europe. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 38(6), 1009–1027.
Thobani, S. (2007). Exalted subjects: Studies in the making of race and nation in Canada. University of Toronto Press.
United Nations. (2020). Global trends: Forced displacement in 2020. UNHCR. https://www.unhcr.org/flagship-reports/globaltrends/
Walia, H. (2021). Border and rule: Global migration, capitalism, and the rise of racist nationalism. Haymarket Books.
Whitehead, J. (2016). Intersectionality and primary accumulation. Caste and gender in India under the sign of monopoly-finance capital. Monthly Review: An independent socialist magazine, 68(6), 37–52.
Wilding, R. (2007). Transnational ethnographies and anthropological imaginings of migrancy. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 33(2), 331–348.
Wimmer, A., & Schiller, N. G. (2002). Methodological nationalism and beyond: Nation-state building, migration and the social sciences. Global Networks (Oxford), 2(4), 301–334. https://doi.org/10.1111/1471-0374.00043
Wood, E. M. (2003). Empire of capital. Verso.
Yuval-Davis, N. (2006). Intersectionality and feminist politics. European Journal of Women’s Studies, 13(3), 193–209.
Yuval-Davis, N., Wemyss, G., & Cassidy, K. (2018). Everyday bordering, belonging and the reorientation of British immigration legislation. Sociology (Oxford), 52(2), 228–244. https://doi.org/10.1177/0038038517702599
Zetter, R., & Ruaudel, H. (2016). Refugees’ right to work and access to labor markets–An assessment. World Bank Global Program on Forced Displacement (GPFD) and the Global Knowledge Partnership on Migration and Development (KNOMAD) Thematic Working Group on Forced Migration. KNOMAD Working Paper. World Bank Group.
Zoomers, A. (2010). Globalisation and the foreignization of space: Seven processes driving the current global land grab. The Journal of Peasant Studies, 37(2), 429–447. https://doi.org/10.1080/03066151003595325
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2022 The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Ritchie, G., Carpenter, S., Mojab, S. (2022). As Migrants Move: (Re)formation of Class and Class Struggle. In: Ritchie, G., Carpenter, S., Mojab, S. (eds) Marxism and Migration. Marx, Engels, and Marxisms. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-98839-5_1
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-98839-5_1
Published:
Publisher Name: Palgrave Macmillan, Cham
Print ISBN: 978-3-030-98838-8
Online ISBN: 978-3-030-98839-5
eBook Packages: Political Science and International StudiesPolitical Science and International Studies (R0)