“…Theoretically, for instance, we note the rise of an ontological position that is more process-, performance-and practice-oriented, with mobilities being seen as emergent and in need of theorisation as such. This involves, for instance, the use and development of work by Goffman (Jensen, 2006(Jensen, , 2010Licoppe, 2009;Yeoh and Huang, 2010) and de Certeau (Bissell, 2009;Farías, 2010;Kidder, 2009), as well as on affect (Bissell, 2010;Conradson and Latham, 2007;Jensen et al, 2014), practices (Aldred and Jungnickel, 2013;Benson, 2011;Cresswell and Merriman, 2011;Hui, 2013;Larsen, 2008a), creating networks (Blok, 2010;Hui, 2012;Larsen et al, 2006;Larsen, 2008b;Nowicka, 2007;Ren, 2011) and the non-representational (McHugh, 2009;Spinney, 2011;Vannini, 2011). Relatedly, empirical analyses have privileged not the functionality of moving from A to B but experiences and socio-cultural constructions of mobilities (Cresswell, 2006;Jensen, 2009).…”