TY - JOUR
T1 - How Homeland Experiences Shape Refugee Belonging
T2 - Rethinking Exile, Home, and Integration in the Syrian Case
AU - Pearlman, Wendy
N1 - Funding Information:
The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This work was supported by the Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung Fellowship for Experienced Researchers.
Funding Information:
The author is grateful for helpful feedback from Alexandra Blackman, Guilia El Dardiry, Aliza Luft, Ghassan Hage, Roger Waldinger, as well as enriching conversations with Georges Khalil, Yassin Haj Saleh, and Yassin Sweihat. She is especially indebted to Jamie Winders and Rawan Arrar for their close readings and invaluable input. She also thanks organizers and participants at the 2018 Symposium of the North American Society for Exile Studies; 2020 Middle East Studies Association Annual Meeting; Workshop on (In)Security in Everyday Life: Perspectives from the Middle East, sponsored by the Arab Council for the Social Sciences, Beirut, Lebanon; Northwestern University MENA Graduate Student Workshop; UCLA Sociology Colloquium; and Brigham Young University Political Science Workshop. For assistance with interview transcription, translation, and coding, as well as other research over many years, she thanks Thomas Abers Lourenco, Nicholas Abushacra, Naomi Aisen, Felix Beilin, Brianna Bilter, Alexander Karmin, Sarah Richman, Imane Ridouh, Leo Sainati, Zinya Salfiti, Carol Silber, Sumaya Tabbah, and the Northwestern University Political Science Department Farrell Fellows Program. All errors are her own. The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This work was supported by the Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung Fellowship for Experienced Researchers.
Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2022.
PY - 2023/3
Y1 - 2023/3
N2 - Studies of refugee belonging, as a key facet of integration, primarily focus on post-flight processes. Adopting an approach to integration that is temporally and spatially broader, this article argues that refugees’ varied experiences of belonging or estrangement in origin countries fundamentally condition their subsequent experiences of belonging or estrangement in settlement countries. To explore this argument, the article develops a framework that distinguishes between the psychosocial and locational aspects of home, identifying five distinct categories of experience: home in the homeland, exile in the homeland, exile outside the homeland, home outside the homeland, or overlaps of exile and home across borders. The article illustrates these categories in the Syrian case, using original interviews with displaced Syrians and a range of texts by Syrian writers. In doing so, it demonstrates how knowing whether or how refugees found belonging inside their homelands before displacement enriches understandings of who refugees are, what they seek, and what home or exile means to them. While these pre-flight experiences cannot precisely predict integration outcomes, they shape the frame of reference that refugees carry into homemaking in refuge and, thus, the experiences of belonging that they develop there.
AB - Studies of refugee belonging, as a key facet of integration, primarily focus on post-flight processes. Adopting an approach to integration that is temporally and spatially broader, this article argues that refugees’ varied experiences of belonging or estrangement in origin countries fundamentally condition their subsequent experiences of belonging or estrangement in settlement countries. To explore this argument, the article develops a framework that distinguishes between the psychosocial and locational aspects of home, identifying five distinct categories of experience: home in the homeland, exile in the homeland, exile outside the homeland, home outside the homeland, or overlaps of exile and home across borders. The article illustrates these categories in the Syrian case, using original interviews with displaced Syrians and a range of texts by Syrian writers. In doing so, it demonstrates how knowing whether or how refugees found belonging inside their homelands before displacement enriches understandings of who refugees are, what they seek, and what home or exile means to them. While these pre-flight experiences cannot precisely predict integration outcomes, they shape the frame of reference that refugees carry into homemaking in refuge and, thus, the experiences of belonging that they develop there.
KW - belonging
KW - exile
KW - integration
KW - refugees
KW - settlement, home, Syria, Middle East
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U2 - 10.1177/01979183221088206
DO - 10.1177/01979183221088206
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85128189298
SN - 0197-9183
VL - 57
SP - 160
EP - 186
JO - International Migration Review
JF - International Migration Review
IS - 1
ER -