Abstract
Oral Presentation at EASA 2022: Transformation, Hope and the Commons
This paper reflects on how people on the Isle of Coll (Scotland) experienced and debated ferry mobility during the pandemic. In the absence of Covid-19 cases on Coll, the ferry connection to the mainland was the focus of heated debates and of pandemic policymaking for the islands. However, even when the strictest measures were in place, island life relied on extensive mobilities, making the ferry a necessary ‘lifeline’ and an infection risk. In this paper, I focus on the ‘essential’ mobilities of islanders travelling to the mainland to obtain services they could not access on Coll. On the one hand, I show that the pandemic highlighted the dependency of island life on mobilities in the context of depopulation and service withdrawal in the region, emphasising islanders’ limited control over the mobilities that sustain their everyday lives. Islanders were forced to continue being mobile, and experiences of mainland journeys shifted from routine to being framed by worries and fear of infection. On the other hand, I argue that some islanders used ‘essential’ reasons for journeys strategically to see mainland family and escape feeling stuck. In doing so, they regained a sense of control over their mobility and experienced journeys as adventure and excitement, turning ‘essential’ into existential mobilities. In a community without police presence to enforce pandemic policies, this way of negotiating restrictions created a locally specific regime of mobility, combining policy-makers’ category of essential travel with islanders’ existential reasons for journeys into what islanders considered ‘essential for island life’.
This paper reflects on how people on the Isle of Coll (Scotland) experienced and debated ferry mobility during the pandemic. In the absence of Covid-19 cases on Coll, the ferry connection to the mainland was the focus of heated debates and of pandemic policymaking for the islands. However, even when the strictest measures were in place, island life relied on extensive mobilities, making the ferry a necessary ‘lifeline’ and an infection risk. In this paper, I focus on the ‘essential’ mobilities of islanders travelling to the mainland to obtain services they could not access on Coll. On the one hand, I show that the pandemic highlighted the dependency of island life on mobilities in the context of depopulation and service withdrawal in the region, emphasising islanders’ limited control over the mobilities that sustain their everyday lives. Islanders were forced to continue being mobile, and experiences of mainland journeys shifted from routine to being framed by worries and fear of infection. On the other hand, I argue that some islanders used ‘essential’ reasons for journeys strategically to see mainland family and escape feeling stuck. In doing so, they regained a sense of control over their mobility and experienced journeys as adventure and excitement, turning ‘essential’ into existential mobilities. In a community without police presence to enforce pandemic policies, this way of negotiating restrictions created a locally specific regime of mobility, combining policy-makers’ category of essential travel with islanders’ existential reasons for journeys into what islanders considered ‘essential for island life’.
Original language | English |
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Publication status | Published - 27 Jul 2022 |
Event | EASA 2022: Transformation, Hope and the Commons - Belfast, United Kingdom Duration: 26 Jul 2022 → 29 Jul 2022 Conference number: 17 https://www.easaonline.org/conferences/easa2022/ |
Conference
Conference | EASA 2022: Transformation, Hope and the Commons |
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Country/Territory | United Kingdom |
City | Belfast |
Period | 26/07/22 → 29/07/22 |
Internet address |