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Cristina Temenos1

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This study explores how multiple crises intersect with human mobilities, revealing that mobility involves navigating ongoing hardship, not just physical movement. Crisis is a lived experience, not an exceptional event.

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Area of Science:

  • Mobility Studies
  • Crisis Geographies
  • Socio-economic Geography

Background:

  • Recent research (2017-present) examines the intersection of multiple crises with mobilities.
  • Existing work in health, economic, ecological, and geopolitical geographies is shaped by crisis mobilities.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To analyze how recent scholarship advances mobilities research.
  • To explore the spatial dimensions of crisis through the lens of mobility.
  • To understand crisis not as an event but as an ongoing state impacting lived experiences.

Main Methods:

  • Literature review of research published between 2017 and the present.
  • Analysis of scholarly work focusing on the intersection of crisis moments and ongoing crisis states.
  • Examination of health, economic, ecological, and geopolitical geographies.

Main Results:

  • Crisis mobilities significantly shape contemporary health, economic, ecological, and geopolitical landscapes.
  • Mobility research is advanced by understanding the relationship between crisis moments and ongoing crisis states.
  • The concept of crisis is spatialized through the study of mobilities.

Conclusions:

  • Mobility encompasses navigating temporalities of hardship, integrating crisis into lived experience.
  • Crisis should be understood as a continuous state rather than an exceptional occurrence.
  • Mobilities research offers a framework for spatializing understandings of crisis.