“…The current economic environment is significantly shaped by longstanding and emerging crises: the refugee crisis of 2015, the pandemic of 2019, the ongoing Russian-Ukrainian war, the emerging Israel-Gaza conflict and the economic crisis that is linked to and a consequence of these events, and the climate crisis that is now unfolding. These events, together with decades of neo-liberal exploitation of resources (Lakes & Carter, 2011), pose new challenges to the mobility sector by causing downward social mobility, job insecurity, and an unequal society (Dello Buono & Bell Lara, 2007), threatening social rights for vulnerable populations (Hasenfeld & Garrow, 2012), and increasing vulnerability to climate-induced changes (Fieldman, 2011). As a result, a new approach and a new way of thinking is required.…”