@article{ed32e96a27494775b63dbccec5168ef9,
title = "Voices from {\textquoteleft}backstage{\textquoteright}: London nightworkers before and during the pandemic",
abstract = "Nightworkers, who move in the night as a means of earning a living, remain largely invisible from the mainstream society, pandemic times or not. Yet their fears, uncertainties and acts of courage are equally revealing of what it means to be mobile in these times of immobility.",
author = "Julius-Cezar MacQuarie and Shirley Martin",
note = "Special thanks to the editor of the Coronavirus and Mobility Forum, Professor Biao Xiang, for his insightful comments on previous drafts. Dr Julius-Cezar MacQuarie writes on nightwork, and embodied precariousness. He founded the Nightworkshop, a laboratory to research nightwork in global and smaller cities (Budapest, Istanbul, London, Milan, Moscow, Prague and Sofia). MacQuarie carried out one-year night ethnography in London{\textquoteright}s New Spitalfields fruit, vegetable and flower market, between 2014 and 2015, where he laboured next to his co-nightworkers, some of which appear in this photo montage: Invisible Faces of the Nocturnal Market. Dr Shirley Martin is a Social Policy Lecturer at University College Cork and is currently conducting research in the areas of migrant integration and engagement in civic society through volunteerism. In addition, she is the Irish Primary Investigator for the European Commission Horizon2020 Project IMMERSE (Integration mapping of Refugee and Migrant Children in Schools in Europe)",
year = "2020",
month = oct,
day = "19",
language = "English",
journal = "The Coronavirus and Mobility Forum",
publisher = "University of Oxford",
}