What is it about?
This article analyses how digital nomads and nation-states relate to one another. Specifically, it focuses on digital nomads' strategies to bypass the frictions nation-states impose upon them, such as high-costs of living, visa restrictions and taxation, while looking simultaneously at the special visa programmes created by 27 countries worldwide to attract this emerging niche of consumers.
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Why is it important?
The article contributes to understand how new mobility regimes are shaped according to neoliberal ideologies, often racialised and classist, that sort between self-reliant and abject travellers. At the same time, by focusing on the interaction between digital nomads and nation-states, the research shows how mobility regimes are not mere top-down systems of control, but rather frictional assemblages, where different degrees of privilege, precarity and power interplay to determine which movements are valuable or glamourous and which are stigmatised or blocked.
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This page is a summary of: Moving with and against the state: digital nomads and frictional mobility regimes, Mobilities, May 2023, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/17450101.2023.2209825.
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