%0 Journal Article %J Central and Eastern European Migration Review %D 2022 %T When Distrust Meets Hope: Georgian Migrant Women in Greece %A Zmiejewski, Weronika %A Mühlfried, Florian %K Caucasus %K distrust %K Greece %K hope %K migration %X

For many women situated in post-socialist countries, the end of communism entailed the loss of state protection and social security. This often resulted in migration, underpinned by the hope for a better future and facilitated by trust in social networks. Trust and hope are often highlighted in the social-science literature as being indispensable means for navigating migration. What this perspective lacks, however, is an eye for the detrimental effects of the work of hope and for the beneficial effects of the work of distrust. For it can be hope that relates a subject to its exploiter and/or exploitative circumstances and it can be distrust that provides an escape route and increases agency. This article considers the illusive dimension of hope and the mobilising effect of distrust by referring to the experiences of Georgian migrant women in Thessaloniki (Greece). It shows how hope occasionally emanates out of distrust and how the combination of the two allows for new perspectives of action.

 

%B Central and Eastern European Migration Review %V 12 %P 245-263 %G eng %N 1 %1

263

%2

6 February 2022

%3

8 September 2022

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2 November 2022

%& 245 %R 10.54667/ceemr.2022.08