成为城市的一部分:被迫流离失所后的当地安置

IF 1.3 Q2 GEOGRAPHY Fennia-International Journal of Geography Pub Date : 2023-06-22 DOI:10.11143/fennia.127425
Ilse van Liempt
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引用次数: 3

摘要

对于难民来说,到达一个新地方本身就充满了情感——充满了迷失方向和对未知的恐惧——但它也可以是一种解放,并带来新的联系。本文探讨了一系列关于被迫流离失所是如何经历并转变为当地安置的问题。有人认为,重要的是要认识到,全球移徙的基础是注意这些过程在当地的生活和生产方式。我承认,被迫移徙者一抵达,就陷入一种基础设施中,这种基础设施是为他们作为一类特殊的移徙者而设置的,它把他们引向某些机构和地方;然而,与此同时,我认为这不是他们使用和探索的唯一基础设施。从难民自己如何试图建立联系并在新城市中找到自己的方式开始,可以探索官方对抵达的反应与难民日常生活经历之间潜在的重叠、差距和紧张关系。本文明确将整个城市作为分析单位,不限于专门为难民提供的特定地点或已知难民到达和/或居住的特定社区。有人认为,对公共和半公共空间的关注很重要,因为它允许探索对难民有意义的空间,并可能对与现有基础设施的连接或断开产生新的见解。这种方法为意想不到的事情提供了更多的空间,但也为平凡的和日常的事情提供了更多的空间,这些都在产生一种反叙事的过程中发挥了重要作用,这种叙事反对以难民自己的经历为中心的正式和制度化的难民到来的框架。
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Becoming part of the city: local emplacement after forced displacement
For refugees, arriving in a new place is inherently emotional – fraught with experiences of disorientation and fear of the unknown – but it can also be liberating and result in new connections. This article explores a series of questions around how forced displacement is experienced and turned into local emplacement. It is argued that it is important to recognize that global migration is grounded through attention to the ways in which such processes are locally lived and produced. I acknowledge that, on arrival, forced migrants become entangled in an infrastructure – laid out for them as a special category of migrants – that is directing them towards certain institutions and places; however, at the same time, I argue that this is not the only infrastructure which they use and explore. Starting from the issue of how refugees themselves try to build connections and find their way in a new city enables the exploration of potential overlaps, gaps and tensions between the official response to arrival and the everyday lived experiences of refugees. The city as a whole is explicitly taken as the unit of analysis in this article, without limitations to specific places dedicated to refugees or specific neighbourhoods where it is known that refugees arrive and/or are housed. It is argued that a focus on public and semi-public spaces is important as it allows an exploration of spaces that are meaningful to refugees and might result in new insights on connections or disconnections with already existing infrastructures. This approach offers more room for the unexpected – but also the mundane and the everyday – which all play an important part in the production of a counter-narrative against the formal and institutionalized way of framing the arrival of refugees in which refugees’ own experiences are the more central focus.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
审稿时长
16 weeks
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