Urban Geography
Volume 36, Issue 1, 2015, Pages 44-63

Mothering urban space, governing migrant women: The construction of intersectional positions in area-based interventions in Berlin (Article)

Marquardt N.* , Schreiber V.
  • a Department of Human Geography, Goethe-University Frankfurt Am Main, Grüneburgplatz 1, Frankfurt am Main, 60323, Germany
  • b Department of Human Geography, Goethe-University Frankfurt Am Main, Grüneburgplatz 1, Frankfurt am Main, 60323, Germany

Abstract

In this paper, we investigate new ways of governing migrant populations in Germany brought forth by social policies on the local level of inner-city neighborhoods. In recent years, numerous initiatives on the local level have constituted the migrant neighborhood as a site of governmental attention. One initiative that policymakers consider particularly innovative is the neighborhood mothers program in Berlin, a program that instructs migrant women as agents of neighborhood improvement and encourages them to establish peer-to-peer relations to other migrant women in order to pass on social norms. In the paper, we combine governmentality and intersectionality theory to critically examine the modes of behavior change promoted by the neighborhood mothers program and the political rationalities that are used to justify the governing of (and through) migrant women. We draw particular attention to the spatial dimensions of the neighborhood mothers program, to the ways in which it targets domestic and intimate spaces as sites of inspection and intervention and appoints migrant women as door openers for entry of the state into the regulation of families and communities. © 2014 © 2014 Taylor & Francis.

Author Keywords

feminist urban studies Migration area-based policies behavior change policies Intersectionality Integration Governmentality

Index Keywords

urban area urban policy Germany policy approach governance approach inner city area social policy Berlin womens status

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84924765043&doi=10.1080%2f02723638.2014.961358&partnerID=40&md5=c4e7fdfc5fb71b24a7198e65449a57c8

DOI: 10.1080/02723638.2014.961358
ISSN: 02723638
Cited by: 3
Original Language: English