APMJ Volume 34 No. 2, 2025
Special Issue: Magnified precarity, re-enhanced agency: The COVID-19 pandemic experiences of Filipino migrant workers in different contexts
Guest Editors: Itaru Nagasaka and Asuncion Fresnoza-Flot
Special issue introduction
Magnified precarity, re-enhanced agency: The COVID-19 pandemic experiences of Filipino migrant workers in different contexts
Itaru Nagasaka and Asuncion Fresnoza-Flot
Special issue articles
Nuancing COVID-19 pandemic experiences of vulnerable people: The case of (ir)regular Filipino migrants in Paris
Asuncion Fresnoza-Flot and Kristine Busson
Concession, cooperation and contestation: Filipino undocumented migrant domestic workers in the UK and the Netherlands navigating the COVID-19 pandemic
Roderick Galam and Lalaine Siruno
In the interstice of health and economy: The discourse of bio-citizenship and the black economy among Filipino migrant domestic workers in Belgium during the COVID-19 pandemic
Ferlie Rose Ann N. Famaloan
From doing essential work to social good: Filipino racialized labor and social agency during the COVID-19 pandemic in Alberta, Canada
Glenda Bonifacio
Re-mobilizing immobilized labor: Pandemic concessions and migrant farmworkers in Japan
Yuya Iida and Itaru Nagasaka
Filipino technical interns and specified skilled workers in Japan during the COVID-19 pandemic: A typology of (im)mobility patterns
Romeo Jumao-as Toring
Special issue research note
The invisibility of Filipino women in rural Japan during the COVID-19 pandemic
Eri Ono
Article
Contesting migrant precarity in the Global South? Informal labor markets, high-risk coping strategies and low-income Filipino migrants in the United
Arab Emirates
Froilan Malit and Kristian Patrick Alexander
Book review
Tangled Mobilities: Places, Affects, and Personhood across Social Spheres in Asian Migration by Asuncion Fresnoza-Flot and Gracia Liu-Farrer
Roderick Galam