From tents to temporary shelters. Coping strategies and forms of resistance of refugees from Syria to constraining settlement policies

Autor: Doraï, Kamel
Přispěvatelé: Institut Français du Proche-Orient (IFPO), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-MIN AFF ETRANG, American University of Beirut, ANR-15-CE28-0005,LAJEH,Temps des conflits / temps des migration : Réflexions sur les catégories et la généalogie des migrations au Moyen-Orient(2015), Doraï, Kamel, Inégalités, discriminations, intégration - Temps des conflits / temps des migration : Réflexions sur les catégories et la généalogie des migrations au Moyen-Orient - - LAJEH2015 - ANR-15-CE28-0005 - AAPG2015 - VALID
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2016
Předmět:
Zdroj: City Debate, Policy Mobilities, International Aid, and Urban Planning: Rethinking Regionalism and Refugees Policies
City Debate, Policy Mobilities, International Aid, and Urban Planning: Rethinking Regionalism and Refugees Policies, American University of Beirut, Mar 2016, Beyrouth, Lebanon
Colloque international City Debate, Policy Mobilities, International Aid, and Urban Planning : Rethinking Regionalism and Refugees Policies
Colloque international City Debate, Policy Mobilities, International Aid, and Urban Planning : Rethinking Regionalism and Refugees Policies, American University of Beirut, Mar 2016, Beyrouth, Lebanon
Popis: International audience; Since the outbreak of the Syrian conflict in 2011, over 4 million refugees settled in neighbouring countries. While Jordan and Turkey have decided to open refugee camps, Lebanon still refuses this option. However, at a regional level less than 20% of the registered refugees reside in camps. Settlement in refugee camps is well documented whereas self-settled refugee groups have been less studied. This presentation will analyse the settlement strategies developed by refugees to adapt in contexts of high constraints, due to the precarious legal status of these refugees and their socio-economic vulnerability, as well as the policies developed by host states and humanitarian organisations. I will analyse the construction process itself, looking at the material evolution of housing units (from tents to temporary shelters), in relation to the diversity of the contexts in which they settle (camps vs. self-settlements). How do refugees appropriate their new housing? How do they use and transform humanitarian materials in order to build their house? What is the role of kinship, village and tribal networks in shaping forms of gatherings at a local level in host states? This presentation is based on fieldwork since 2013 on Syrian refugees in Northern Jordan, and Palestinians from Syria in South Lebanon. The Palestinian settlement experience in Lebanon that I have been studying since the mid-1990s, can contribute to a better understanding of the current Syrian refugee crisis, which saw the creation of new refugee camps in the Middle East. It invites us to rethink the issue of camps vs. self-settlement processes as management tools or tools of control of refugees.
Databáze: OpenAIRE