Tracing the work-related mobility patterns and demographic shifts in Istanbul
In policy and research, it is widely acknowledged that everyday mobilities mobilities and urban access have significant implications for inequalities through various spheres of everyday life. Work is one such area, where particular social groups, such as women of lower socioeconomic status, have become disadvantaged due to mobility constraints. However, most scholarly attention to date has been on transport, economic, social and cultural barriers for the disadvantaged populations in reaching economic opportunities. In this paper, I extend this understanding into the people’s perceptions of work and mobility. Specifically, in light of the economic and demographic shifts, I look at the work-related mobilities of men and women living and/or working in low-income neighbourhoods in Istanbul, a rapidly growing city through large infrastructure and urban renewal projects. Using a mixed method study design, I investigate how people move within cities in relation to economic activities, how they perceive work and the right to mobility, and how these perceptions relate to the built environment and access to infrastructure. I eventually argue that work-related mobilities have increasingly become intertwined with both residential and non-residential spaces of everyday life.
Date: 4 March 2019, 17:30 (Monday, 8th week, Hilary 2019)
Venue: Rewley House, 1-7 Wellington Square OX1 2JA
Venue Details: Stopforth Metcalfe room
Speaker: Dr Nihan Akyelken (University of Oxford)
Organising department: Department for Continuing Education
Organisers: Tim Burman (Continuing Education), Tim Burman (Continuing Education)
Organiser contact email address: gradschool@conted.ox.ac.uk
Part of: Graduate seminar programme in the social sciences
Topics:
Booking required?: Not required
Booking url: https://www.conted.ox.ac.uk/events/view/social-sciences-seminar-geographies-of-work-and-mobility-tracing-the-work-relate
Audience: Members of the University only
Editor: Tim Burman