Fluid identifications and persistent inequalities
Abstract
Research in transnational migration long neglected the study of power relations among migrants. In this paper, I explore within-group heterogeneity, viewing
it as the outcome of the processes of social boundary making. How does social boundary making among migrants relate to their chances to generate capital
in different local and transnational social fields? Focusing on dynamics between people identifying as Iranians and living in Hamburg, I critically discuss previous work that attempts to explain their lack of social cohesion. An ethnographic account of alliances and divisions that emerge around an Iranian
cultural festival illustrates that social boundaries can constitute barriers to capital accumulation, but they can also be actively shaped in order to generate
capital and overcome such limits. Through the analysis of this case study I argue that social boundary making among migrants reflects their engagement with
local and global regimes of social inequality.