Coe is an internationally recognized leader in the scholarship of transnational families, aging, and care work, winning awards for her books The Scattered Family: Parenting, African Migrants, and Global Inequality, The New American Servitude: Political Belonging among African Immigrant Home Care ...
Coe is an internationally recognized leader in the scholarship of transnational families, aging, and care work, winning awards for her books The Scattered Family: Parenting, African Migrants, and Global Inequality, The New American Servitude: Political Belonging among African Immigrant Home Care Workers, and Changes in Care: Aging, Migration and Social Class in West Africa.
She is known for her careful analysis of how parents’ migration can cause various degrees of rupture in transnational families, her argument that international migration should be studied within the framework of the longer history and broader phenomenon of urban migration, and her leadership in initiating a new focus on children’s experiences within the field of migration studies.
She is currently beginning a new project on how transnational migrants navigate national forms of social protection in later life. From her scholarship on African immigrant personal support workers in the United States, she has additional research interests in care worker organizing and resistance and the labor involved in end-of-life care..