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Migrant platformed subjectivity: Rethinking the mediation of transnational affective economies via digital connectivity services

journal contribution
posted on 2020-09-01, 00:00 authored by Earvin Cabalquinto, Guy Wood-BradleyGuy Wood-Bradley
This article investigates how commercial and government-based sectors in the Philippines deploy emotive mechanisms to promote the importance of connectivity services in addressing the affective and transnational needs of overseas Filipinos. By combining a walkthrough method with critical discourse analysis, the study compares and contrasts the interface, operating model and mode of governance of three selected case studies in the Philippines: Western Union, LBC Express Inc. and BaLinkBayan. The findings reveal that the emotionalising techniques of connectivity services construct what we call ‘platformed migrant subjectivity’. This conception articulates migrants as economic subjects and valued clientele within the commercial infrastructures and operations of an online platform. In sum, this article takes a nuanced approach to examine how commercial and government institutions utilise online platforms in mobilising emotional, transnational and digital transactions, which may redefine a migrant’s subjectivity, mobility and citizenship in a digital era.

History

Journal

International Journal of Cultural Studies

Volume

23

Issue

5

Pagination

787 - 802

Publisher

SAGE Publishing

Location

Thousand Oaks, CA

ISSN

1367-8779

eISSN

1460-356X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2020, The Authors

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