This is a highly innovative book, which explores the nature and impact of family travel, focussing particularly on how it influences the identities and future-making projects of both families and individuals. Drawing on data from parents and young people, and including the perspectives of those who reject travel (for environmental reasons) as well as those who travel a lot, the book engages with important debates that cut across several disciplines including the extent to which such practices contribute to social differentiation, how mobility is conceptualised, and the role of travel within broader understandings of parenting. It is also international in its orientation, and will thus be of significant interest to researchers in many different national contexts.
Rachel BrooksFAcSS, Professor of Sociology, University of Surrey, UK
This is a thought-provoking book on how mobility shapes individuals. By zooming into the experiences of family travel, the book offers engaging accounts of the links between the ideas of mobility and social class. Highly recommended for sociologists of education and social scientists more broadly.
Maia Chankseliani, Associate Professor of Comparative and International Education, University of Oxford, UK
Maxwell, Yemini and Bach offer a rigorous and thoughtful journey into some of the uncharted aspects of mobility, by exploring family travel and its nuanced links with parenting, family-making practices, strategies of capital accumulation and class differentiations.
Jason Beech, Senior Lecturer in Education Policy, Monash University, Australia
Nurturing Mobilities
Nurturing Mobilities employs new empirical material and an innovative theoretical framing to bring new clarity to why families travel today and what happens when they do. The authors argue that an imperative to think with mobility and to aspire to be mobile shapes identities, futures and family practices.
Drawing on data that examines family travel practices typically short-term trips across the working-, middle-, and globally mobile middle-classes, Nurturing Mobilities describes how families travel, why they travel, and the role young family members play in curating family travel. Vitally, it examines the two biggest contemporary issues in global mobility: COVID-19 and climate change. How has COVID-19 changed travel motivations in a world beset by lockdowns and diminished finances? How are concerns around climate change, and engagements with global citizenship education, changing family travel practices?
Nurturing Mobilities illuminates new ways in which social class divergence is forged through movements across borders. The authors theoretically inter-disciplinary approach delivers a full analysis of the apparently divergent processes that differentiate family travel along social class lines, yet also allow travel to play a core role in social mobility. This book is a vital resource for scholars and students studying mobility, globalisation, social class, and climate change engagement.
Claire Maxwell is a professor of sociology at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. Her research has focused on the ways the internationalisation of education has shaped education systems and how elite forms of provision are being developed and embedded around the world. A second focus has been on the lives of globally mobile professionals and their families, examining school choice, identities and family practices.
Miri Yemini is a comparative education scholar at Tel Aviv University, Israel, with interests in internationalisation of education in schools and higher education, global citizenship education, and education in conflict-ridden societies, with a particular focus on the role of mobility in educational experiences. Dr. Yemini is an active member of CIES, CESE and BAICE and she is a President Elect for the Israeli Comparative Education Society.
Katrine Mygind Bach holds a Masters in Global Development and a Bachelor degree in Sociology from the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. Previously, she spent several years in India working in the field of rural development. Her research focuses on the intersection between social and environmental sustainability, and the role of climate governance in these processes.
Networked Urban Mobilities Series
Editors: Sven Kesselring, Nrtingen-Geislingen University, Germany and Malene Freudendal-Pedersen, Roskilde University, Denmark
The Networked Urban Mobilities series resulted from the Cosmobilities Network of mobility research and the Taylor & Francis journal, Applied Mobilities. This three volume set, ideal for mobilities researchers and practitioners, explores a broad number of topics including planning, architecture, geography and urban design.
Exploring Networked Urban Mobilities
Theories, Concepts, Ideas
Malene Freudendal-Pedersen and Sven Kesselring
Experiencing Networked Urban Mobilities
Sites, Methods, Practices
Malene Freudndal-Pedersen, Katrine Hartmann-Petersen and Emmy Laura Perez Fjalland
Envisioning Networked Urban Mobilities
Art, Creativity, Performance
Aslak Aamot Kjaerulff, Sven Kesselring, Peter Peters and Kevin Hannam
Sharing Mobilities
New Perspectives for the Mobile Risk Society
Edited by Malene Freudendal-Pedersen, Sven Kesselring and Dennis Zuev
Nurturing Mobilities
Family Travel in the 21st Century
Claire Maxwell, Miri Yemini and Katrine Mygind Bach
For more information about this series, please visit: https://www.routledge.com/Networked-Urban-Mobilities-Series/book-series/NUM
First published 2022
by Routledge
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and by Routledge
2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon, OX14 4RN
Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business
2022 Claire Maxwell, Miri Yemini and Katrine Mygind Bach
The right of Claire Maxwell, Miri Yemini and Katrine Mygind Bach to be identified as authors of this work has been asserted by them in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers.
Trademark notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
A catalog record for this title has been requested
ISBN: 9780367520939 (hbk)
ISBN: 9781032114811 (pbk)
ISBN: 9781003056430 (ebk)
DOI: 10.4324/9781003056430
Typeset in Bembo
by codeMantra
DOI: 10.4324/9781003056430-1
This book seeks to establish a new agenda in the scholarship of family travel, with a focus on short-term travel. Such a focus is necessary as so many families, not only the most highly resourced, are now mobile. With cheaper air travel, an increasing imperative to see the world, a commitment by schools to ensure their students see themselves situated in a broader transnational space through the internationalisation of education, religious pilgrimages, and a desire to maintain links to families spread all over the world, more and more families are mobile. Yet no book exists to date that examines the various aspects of short-term family travel, and none does this through a sociological lens. Therefore, this book examines the ways parents, young adults, and children from various socio-economic and spatial backgrounds engage with the act of travelling, exploring whether and how this shapes understandings of their positionality, not only in more local but also in more global spaces.