63 research outputs found
Navigating Borders
Navigating Borders into the Netherlands provides a unique in-depth look at human smuggling processes. Based on biographical interviews with smuggled migrants in the Netherlands, the study reveals considerable differences that exist in smuggling's underlying causes, how journeys evolve, and outcomes of the process. This research from an insider's perspective clearly demonstrates that smuggled migrants are not passive actors, there is a broad variety in types of smugglers, and interactions between migrants and smugglers largely determine how the smuggling process evolves
āI Have to Start All over Again.ā The Role of Institutional and Personal Arrival Infrastructures in Refugeesā Home-making Processes in Amsterdam
In this study, we take the concept of arrival infrastructures as a starting point to explore refugeesā home-making processes in Amsterdam. This concept allows us to look beyond formal infrastructures set up for refugees and to take a closer look at all (f)actors playing a role in refugeesā processes of āstarting all over againā. Drawing on participatory ethnographic research in a community centre for refugees, we describe the role of institutional as well as personal infrastructures in material and affective terms and show how these are related to refugeesā sense of belonging in the city. We illustrate that refugees become entangled in a web of reception/asylum seekers centres and civic integration requirements that facilitate and constrain their home-making processes in a new place. It is more the informal, personal infrastructures that enable refugees to build social and affective ties in the city. Nevertheless, refugees are still struggling with social isolation and a lack of participation due to their limited opportunities and the relatively closed character of Dutch society. This impacts their sense of belonging and comes at the cost of their integration in the city. These insights raise not only questions on the current organisation of arrival infrastructures for refugees, but also show the need to move towards a multidimensional integration model that includes the role of (civil) society in the destination society in the refugeesā integration processes.
* This article belongs to a special issue on "Refugee Migration to Europe ā Challenges and Potentials for Cities and Regions"
Somalis in Amsterdam: Executive Summary
The Netherlands is home to one of Europe's largest Somali communities. Somalis in Amsterdam are a diverse groupāincluding first-generation refugee and asylum seekers who have recently fled the war in Somalia, second-generation Dutch Somalis born in the Netherlands, and Somalis who arrived in the 1990s as refugees and who are now Dutch citizens.Somalis inĀ AmsterdamĀ is part of a seven-city research series, Somalis in European Cities, by the Open Society Foundations' At Home in Europe project, which examines the realities of people from Somali backgrounds in Amsterdam, Copenhagen,Ā Helsinki,Ā Malmo, Leicester, London, andĀ Oslo
Somalis in Amsterdam
The Netherlands is home to one of Europe's largest Somali communities. Somalis in Amsterdam are a diverse groupāincluding first-generation refugee and asylum seekers who have recently fled the war in Somalia, second-generation Dutch Somalis born in the Netherlands, and Somalis who arrived in the 1990s as refugees and who are now Dutch citizens.Somalis inĀ AmsterdamĀ is part of a seven-city research series, Somalis in European Cities, by the Open Society Foundations' At Home in Europe project, which examines the realities of people from Somali backgrounds in Amsterdam, Copenhagen,Ā Helsinki,Ā Malmo, Leicester, London, andĀ Oslo
Mobility dynamics within the settlement phase of Syrian refugees in Norway and The Netherlands
This paper sets out to investigate the forced and voluntary (im)mobility of Syrians who recently moved to Europe and are in the transition from asylum to settlement. We conceptualise āsettlementā for this group as a dynamic process and trace different forms of mobility in this phase, which is more commonly defined as static and associated with āhaving arrivedā. We take a broad perspective on mobility, including social, mental and physical aspects of moving and being stuck and include refugeesā own experiences and everyday coping strategies in order to understand how the interaction with mobility regimes takes place and is experienced after settlement. We do this by analysing qualitative interviews conducted in two similar but nevertheless different reception and settlement contexts. The Netherlands and Norway are both highly regulated welfare states providing support to newcomers although, importantly, also restricting their agency and mobility, resulting in spatial and social exclusion. By zooming in on research participantsā acts of everyday coping mechanisms and different domains of integration in the two contexts, we identify similarities and differences in strategies for challenging official and everyday definitions of where and what to be after fleeing to Europe.publishedVersio
Socio-Economic Participation of Somali Refugees in the Netherlands, Transnational Networks and Boundary Spanning
In this article we analyse the socio-economic participation of Somali refugees in the Netherlands. Unemployment is higher among Somalis than any other refugee or immigrant group in the Netherlands and they face many obstacles when it comes to social and economic participation. At the same time, they are known for having a strong transnational orientation. We were interested to learn whether and, if so, how Somalis use their transnational networks to overcome obstacles on the Dutch labour market and how boundaries around formal labour markets are negotiated in order to access employment and to participate. We did so by focusing on two strategies employed to participate, namely through Somali organizations in the Netherlands and elsewhere, and by Somalis moving to the UK. In doing so, we looked at Somalisā ability to span boundaries to create opportunities. The concept of transnational networks is helpful in understanding Somalisā daily realities, but conceptually it does not seem to fit entirely as these networks usually only refer to connections with the āhomeland.ā We argue that Somalisā boundary-spanning activities move beyond national levels and involve various scales, sites, and settings. The data we refer to are derived from focus group discussions with 66 Somali people in Amsterdam and 20 interviews with experts who work with the Somali community in the Netherlands. These discussions and interviews were held in 2013ā14. We also draw on 20 interviews with Somali organizations in the Netherlands about their transnational orientation, which were conducted between 2010 and 2013 in the context of another research project
Becoming part of the city: local emplacement after forced displacement
For refugees, arriving in a new place is inherently emotional ā fraught with experiences of disorientation and fear of the unknown ā 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 ā laid out for them as a special category of migrants ā 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 ā but also the mundane and the everyday ā 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 refugeesā own experiences are the more central focus
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
Mobility dynamics within the settlement phase of Syrian refugees in Norway and The Netherlands
This paper sets out to investigate the forced and voluntary (im)mobility of Syrians who recently moved to Europe and are in the transition from asylum to settlement. We conceptualise āsettlementā for this group as a dynamic process and trace different forms of mobility in this phase, which is more commonly defined as static and associated with āhaving arrivedā. We take a broad perspective on mobility, including social, mental and physical aspects of moving and being stuck and include refugeesā own experiences and everyday coping strategies in order to understand how the interaction with mobility regimes takes place and is experienced after settlement. We do this by analysing qualitative interviews conducted in two similar but nevertheless different reception and settlement contexts. The Netherlands and Norway are both highly regulated welfare states providing support to newcomers although, importantly, also restricting their agency and mobility, resulting in spatial and social exclusion. By zooming in on research participantsā acts of everyday coping mechanisms and different domains of integration in the two contexts, we identify similarities and differences in strategies for challenging official and everyday definitions of where and what to be after fleeing to Europe
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