Becoming part of the city: local emplacement after forced displacement

Ilse van Liempt*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

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.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)9-22
Number of pages14
JournalFennia
Volume201
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2023

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This essay is based on a keynote lecture I was asked to give at the Finnish Geography Days in Tampere (2022). I want to thank the organisers Kirsi Pauliina Kallio and Jouni Häkli for inviting me. The empirical research that the lecture was based on was conducted in the context of a project called 'The everyday experiences of young refugees and asylum seekers in public spaces' which was financially supported by the HERA Joint Research Programme, co-funded by AHRC, BMBF via DLR-PT, F.R.S- FNRS, NWO, and the European Commission through Horizon 2020. I am grateful to the field researchers involved in the Dutch part of the project: Mieke Kox and Rik Huizinga and I want to thank Karine Versluis who facilitated the photo-voice workshop and all participants who spent their time talking and sharing their valuable stories and photos with us.

Funding Information:
This? essay? is? based? on? a? keynote? lecture? I? was? asked? to? give? at? the? Finnish? Geography? Days? in? Tampere? (2022).? I? want? to? thank? the? organisers? Kirsi? Pauliina? Kallio? and? Jouni? Häkli? for? inviting? me.? The? empirical? research? that? the? lecture? was? based? on? was? conducted? in? the? context? of? a? project? called? ‘The? everyday? experiences?of?young?refugees?and?asylum?seekers?in?public?spaces’?which?was?financially?supported? by? the? HERA? Joint? Research? Programme,? co-funded? by? AHRC,? BMBF? via? DLR-PT,? F.R.S-? FNRS,? NWO,? and?

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 by the author. This open access article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Funding

This essay is based on a keynote lecture I was asked to give at the Finnish Geography Days in Tampere (2022). I want to thank the organisers Kirsi Pauliina Kallio and Jouni Häkli for inviting me. The empirical research that the lecture was based on was conducted in the context of a project called 'The everyday experiences of young refugees and asylum seekers in public spaces' which was financially supported by the HERA Joint Research Programme, co-funded by AHRC, BMBF via DLR-PT, F.R.S- FNRS, NWO, and the European Commission through Horizon 2020. I am grateful to the field researchers involved in the Dutch part of the project: Mieke Kox and Rik Huizinga and I want to thank Karine Versluis who facilitated the photo-voice workshop and all participants who spent their time talking and sharing their valuable stories and photos with us. This? essay? is? based? on? a? keynote? lecture? I? was? asked? to? give? at? the? Finnish? Geography? Days? in? Tampere? (2022).? I? want? to? thank? the? organisers? Kirsi? Pauliina? Kallio? and? Jouni? Häkli? for? inviting? me.? The? empirical? research? that? the? lecture? was? based? on? was? conducted? in? the? context? of? a? project? called? ‘The? everyday? experiences?of?young?refugees?and?asylum?seekers?in?public?spaces’?which?was?financially?supported? by? the? HERA? Joint? Research? Programme,? co-funded? by? AHRC,? BMBF? via? DLR-PT,? F.R.S-? FNRS,? NWO,? and?

Keywords

  • arrival infrastructures
  • forced displacement
  • local emplacement
  • public space
  • refugees

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