PEOPLE AND PLACES Using Photovoice to Explore Migrant Women’s Sociospatial Engagement in Diverse Local Urban Areas of Santiago, Chile

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Abstract

Framed in a project on conviviality and migration-led diversity in Santiago, Chile, this article presents visual narratives of neighborhood participation. Accounts of migrants’ public lives have turned to underlining mundane forms of conviviality and place-making. Th is visual essay shows how such dynamics can comprise a fertile terrain for public engagement in contexts of “crisis.” Th e account is based on a photovoice exercise developed by three long-established migrant women of diff erent occupations, age, and nationalities during the COVID-19 pandemic, a crisis that shaped the personal/public interface of their lives. I propose that photovoice, by endowing agency and producing situated knowledge, can illuminate migrants’ local engagement, making visible (creatively, descriptively, and symbolically) the connection between the personal and the public while counteracting dominant problem-based representations of migrants.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)136-149
Number of pages14
JournalMigration and Society
Volume6
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jun 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Authors

Keywords

  • Chile
  • COVID-19
  • diversity
  • local engagement
  • migration
  • participatory research
  • photovoice
  • urban space

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