Restricting Human Movement During the COVID-19 Pandemic: New Research Avenues in the Study of Mobility, Migration, and Citizenship

Author:

Piccoli Lorenzo12ORCID,Dzankic Jelena1,Ruedin Didier2,Jacob-Owens Timothy1

Affiliation:

1. European University Institute, Florence, Italy

2. University of Neuchatel, Neuchatel, Switzerland

Abstract

Every government in the world introduced restrictions to human mobility – that is, the movement of persons across and within state borders – in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Such restrictions thus constituted a global phenomenon, but they were by no means globally uniform; rather, they varied significantly between and within states, as well as over time. This research note presents different data sources for studying the drivers and outcomes of mobility restrictions, highlighting specific ways in which the data can be used. We begin by surveying seven new databases capturing various aspects of the regulation of human movement during the COVID-19 pandemic. Drawing inspiration from research on previous pandemics, we then outline five possible research avenues prompted by these data. We suggest that explaining the causes and consequences of such restrictions, as well as the differences between them, can significantly advance research on the governance of mobility, migration, and citizenship.

Funder

National Center of Competence in Research nccr – on the move funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation

Research Council of the European University Institute

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Demography

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4. Bier D. J. 2020. “Research Provides No Basis for Pandemic Travel Bans.” CATO Institute 15. Available at: https://www.cato.org/publications/research-provides-no-basis-pandemic-travel-bans

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