Volume 20, Issue 4 p. 677-696
Original Article

Suspending, settling, sponsoring: the intimate chronomobilities of young Asian migrants in Australia

SHANTHI ROBERTSON

Corresponding Author

SHANTHI ROBERTSON

Senior Research Fellow, Institute for Culture and Society, Western Sydney University, Locked Bag 1797, Penrith, NSW, 2751

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First published: 27 May 2020
Citations: 19

Abstract

In this article, I develop the concept of ‘intimate chronomobilities’ to understand some of the intersections between the temporalities of intimate relationships and of migration in the lives of young and ‘middling’ transnational migrants from Asia to Australia. Drawing on in-depth interview data, I reveal how romantic partnerships are highly significant to experiences of transnational mobility, and how such experiences take place in the context of a governance regime in Australia in which migration has become increasingly transient, transitionary and transitory, and in which sponsored partner and spouse visas can secure migration futures. The analysis explores how the lived and imagined timelines and timings of intimate partnerships play highly significant roles in defining and structuring migrants' mobilities, and reveals how intimate chronomobilities of ‘suspending, settling and sponsoring’ are understood by migrants through lived experiences of sequence, synchronicity and tempo.

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