18 research outputs found
Under the shadow of civilizationist populist discourses
This article explores the extent and limits of anti-immigration discourse in recent political
debates in Turkey. Anti-immigrant discourses have been at the heart of exclusionary
populisms, where right-wing political actors present immigrants as economic, social
and security threats. It is remarkable that this is not yet the case in Turkey, one of the
worldâs major refugee-receiving countries. Using an original dataset, composed of party
programmes, parliamentary records and public statements by presidential candidates in the
last two rounds of general and presidential elections between 2014 and 2018, we argue that
politicians from both incumbent and opposition parties in Turkey have used the ârefugee
cardâ to appeal to the growing social, economic and cultural grievances of their voters but
in a rather limited and divergent manner. Debates over migration have oscillated between
the Western European right-wing populist perception of âthreatâ and the pro-Syrian and
civilizationist populism of the ruling party that relies on a transnational notion of âummahâ
Unfolding intersecting forms of socioâspatial exclusion: Accommodation centres at the height of the ârefugee reception crisisâ in Germany
At the height of the ârefugee reception crisisâ in 2015, a large number of forced migrants had to be accommodated in Germany, which led to the transformation of old infrastructures and building of new centres. Based on extensive fieldwork in three centres in the same city, this article seeks to highlight the intersecting forms of socioâspatial exclusion in refugee accommodations in Germany. First, we unpack how differential internal and external spatial arrangements intersect to aggravate or alleviate social exclusion of forced migrants. Second, we draw attention to the ways in which the regulation of space and social relations inside the accommodation centres intersect with the dominant gendered notions of the refugee label. Despite the potency of power relations that differentially categorizes, controls and excludes, exclusion remains ambivalent as forced migrants consistently claim ownership over the space in and around the centres and build social relationships to maintain a sense of ânormalcyâ
Country report : Belgium
First published in January 2010; Revised April 2010Research for this EUDO Citizenship Observatory Country Report has been jointly supported by the European Commission grant agreement JLS/2007/IP/CA/009 EUCITAC and by the British Academy Research Project CITMODES (both projects co-directed by the EUI and the University of Edinburgh).Revised version: 2013/2