Young refugees’ feelings of belonging? Encounters with rural Denmark and northern Norway
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35003Date
2024-05-07Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
This paper investigates how young refugees settled in rural Norway
and Denmark experience their new places of residence. We find
inspiration in the idea of ‘contradictions of space’ (Kinkaid [2020].
“Re-encountering Lefebvre: Toward a Critical Phenomenology of
Social Space.” Society and Space 38 (1): 167–186.) in exploring how
young refugees navigate issues in rural life from housing,
education, work and social life to their material surroundings,
including the weather. Which experiences result in feelings of
meaning and orientation, and which spur feelings of disorientation
and contradiction? The empirical material is based on fieldwork and
qualitative interviews with young refugees and local volunteers in
rural Norway and Denmark. Despite several differences between
rural areas in the two countries, young refugees’ experiences from
within show many similarities and common experiences between
them. The harsh weather, empty streets, lack of familiarity with the
more formal community life in rural areas, long distances from sites
of education, etc. create feelings of disorientation and
contradiction, while socializing with other refugees provides
feelings of community and belonging. Taken together, the two
aspects drive their decisions to stay in or leave the rural area.
Publisher
Taylor & FrancisCitation
Herslund, Paulgaard. Young refugees’ feelings of belonging? Encounters with rural Denmark and northern Norway. Journal of Youth Studies. 2024Metadata
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Copyright 2024 The Author(s)