Navigating migrant infrastructure and gendered infrastructural violence: reflections from Brazilian women in London

被引:15
作者
McIlwaine, Cathy [1 ]
Evans, Yara [2 ]
机构
[1] Kings Coll London, Dept Geog, London, England
[2] Imperial Coll London, Ctr Environm Policy, London, England
关键词
Brazilians; gender-based violence; gendered infrastructural violence; London; migrant infrastructure; migrants; INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE; DOMESTIC VIOLENCE; URBAN VIOLENCE; MIGRATION; POLITICS; INTERSECTIONS; GEOGRAPHIES; IMMIGRATION; EXPERIENCES; BARRIERS;
D O I
10.1080/0966369X.2022.2073335
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
This paper explores some of the institutional and theoretical silences within debates on infrastructural violence with reference to migrant women survivors of gendered violence. Drawing from feminist thinking around structural and symbolic oppression, it develops the notion of gendered infrastructural violence to help understand how migrant women survivors navigate statutory and non-statutory institutions when seeking support. Empirically, the paper elucidates how diverse Brazilian migrant women in London negotiate multiple forms of passive and active infrastructural violence played out in terms of xenophobia, discrimination and a hostile immigration environment. Such experiences can dissuade them from reporting due to actual and perceived fear of further violence being perpetrated against them. While infrastructural violence perpetrated by an oppressive racial state can exacerbate Brazilian migrant women's suffering of direct gendered abuse, migrant and/or feminist organisations provide invaluable support and an essential protective bulwark. Yet these experiences are mediated differently depending on women's social locations in terms of intersecting race, class, occupational and immigration status and language competencies.
引用
收藏
页码:395 / 417
页数:23
相关论文
共 36 条
  • [1] Urban Violence Against Women and Girls (VAWG) in transnational perspective: reflections from Brazilian women in London
    Mcilwaine, Cathy
    Evans, Yara
    INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT PLANNING REVIEW, 2020, 42 (01) : 93 - 112
  • [2] Gendered transnational impunity and infrastructural violence on the migrant journey through Mexico
    Mills, Talia
    ETHNIC AND RACIAL STUDIES, 2025,
  • [3] NEGOTIATING WOMEN'S RIGHT TO THE CITY: GENDER-BASED AND INFRASTRUCTURAL VIOLENCE AGAINST BRAZILIAN WOMEN IN LONDON AND RESIDENTS IN MARE, RIO DE JANEIRO
    Mcilwain, Cathy
    Krenzinger, Miriam
    Ansari, Moniza Rizzini
    Evans, Yara
    Silva, Eliana Sousa
    REVISTA DE DIREITO DA CIDADE-CITY LAW, 2021, 13 (02): : 954 - 981
  • [4] From a/topia to topia: Towards a gendered right to the city for migrant volunteers in London
    Vacchelli, Elena
    Peyrefitte, Magali
    CITIES, 2018, 76 : 12 - 17
  • [5] Underreporting sexual violence among 'ethnic'1 migrant women: perspectives from Aotearoa/New Zealand
    Rahmanipour, Setayesh
    Kumar, Shannon
    Simon-Kumar, Rachel
    CULTURE HEALTH & SEXUALITY, 2019, 21 (07) : 837 - 852
  • [6] Bodies as territories of exception: the coloniality and gendered necropolitics of state and intimate border violence against migrant women in England
    Heimer, Rosa dos Ventos Lopes
    ETHNIC AND RACIAL STUDIES, 2023, 46 (07) : 1378 - 1406
  • [7] Narratives of experiences of violence of Venezuelan migrant women sheltered at the northwestern Brazilian border
    Makuch, Maria Y.
    Osis, Maria J. D.
    Becerra, Alejandra
    Brasil, Cinthia
    de Amorim, Helder S. F.
    Bahamondes, Luis
    PLOS ONE, 2021, 16 (11):
  • [8] The Voices of Brazilian Women Breaking Free From Intimate Partner Violence
    Pacheco, Leonora Rezende
    Medeiros, Marcelo
    Garcia, Carolyn Marie
    JOURNAL OF FORENSIC NURSING, 2014, 10 (02) : 70 - 76
  • [9] Navigating the COVID-19 crisis: exploring care arrangements and gendered inequalities for migrant women in transnational families in Berlin
    Willers, Susanne
    ETHNIC AND RACIAL STUDIES, 2024, 47 (14) : 3041 - 3063
  • [10] The continuum of gender-based violence experienced by migrant and refugee women in Canada: perspectives from key informants
    Sisic, Mia
    Tastsoglou, Evangelia
    Dawson, Myrna
    Holtmann, Catherine
    Wilkinson, Lori
    Falconer, Chantelle
    FRONTIERS IN SOCIOLOGY, 2024, 9