Organic functionalism, 'community' and place: Refugee studies and the geographical constitution of refugee identities

Typeset version

 

TY  - JOUR
  - White, A
  - 2002
  - Unknown
  - Geoforum
  - Organic functionalism, 'community' and place: Refugee studies and the geographical constitution of refugee identities
  - In Press
  - ()
  - 33
  - 1
  - 73
  - 83
  - The growth in the global population of refugees over the last 20 years has been paralleled by the development and growth of refugee studies as a recognised discipline. However refugees do not comprise a naturally self-delimiting domain of scientific knowledge and have been constituted by refugee studies through discourses that emphasise humanitarian, apolitical and organic functionalist discourses that root refugee identities in particular places. This paper argues that the presently inadequate constitution of refugee identities in refugee studies has been compounded by geographic representations of regional refugee emergencies, stable conceptions of refugees and asylum seekers and dated and unproblematic understandings of space as inactive and not constitutive of social life. Using data collected in interviews held between 1995 and 1998 with representatives from refugee and asylum institutions and organisations this paper illustrates how discourses and funding policies that unproblematically assume community groups represent refugees asylum seekers ignore transnational differences and tensions that can exist in marginalised communities. However it should be pointed out that the discourses about place, nationality and identity and `natural' communities can also be used by the powerless to resist their marginalised and excluded positions.
  - 10.1016/S0016-7185(01)00009-4 |
DA  - 2002/NaN
ER  - 
@article{V53832999,
   = {White,  A },
   = {2002},
   = {Unknown},
   = {Geoforum},
   = {Organic functionalism, 'community' and place: Refugee studies and the geographical constitution of refugee identities},
   = {In Press},
   = {()},
   = {33},
   = {1},
  pages = {73--83},
   = {{The growth in the global population of refugees over the last 20 years has been paralleled by the development and growth of refugee studies as a recognised discipline. However refugees do not comprise a naturally self-delimiting domain of scientific knowledge and have been constituted by refugee studies through discourses that emphasise humanitarian, apolitical and organic functionalist discourses that root refugee identities in particular places. This paper argues that the presently inadequate constitution of refugee identities in refugee studies has been compounded by geographic representations of regional refugee emergencies, stable conceptions of refugees and asylum seekers and dated and unproblematic understandings of space as inactive and not constitutive of social life. Using data collected in interviews held between 1995 and 1998 with representatives from refugee and asylum institutions and organisations this paper illustrates how discourses and funding policies that unproblematically assume community groups represent refugees asylum seekers ignore transnational differences and tensions that can exist in marginalised communities. However it should be pointed out that the discourses about place, nationality and identity and `natural' communities can also be used by the powerless to resist their marginalised and excluded positions.}},
   = {10.1016/S0016-7185(01)00009-4 |},
  source = {IRIS}
}
AUTHORSWhite, A
YEAR2002
MONTHUnknown
JOURNAL_CODEGeoforum
TITLEOrganic functionalism, 'community' and place: Refugee studies and the geographical constitution of refugee identities
STATUSIn Press
TIMES_CITED()
SEARCH_KEYWORD
VOLUME33
ISSUE1
START_PAGE73
END_PAGE83
ABSTRACTThe growth in the global population of refugees over the last 20 years has been paralleled by the development and growth of refugee studies as a recognised discipline. However refugees do not comprise a naturally self-delimiting domain of scientific knowledge and have been constituted by refugee studies through discourses that emphasise humanitarian, apolitical and organic functionalist discourses that root refugee identities in particular places. This paper argues that the presently inadequate constitution of refugee identities in refugee studies has been compounded by geographic representations of regional refugee emergencies, stable conceptions of refugees and asylum seekers and dated and unproblematic understandings of space as inactive and not constitutive of social life. Using data collected in interviews held between 1995 and 1998 with representatives from refugee and asylum institutions and organisations this paper illustrates how discourses and funding policies that unproblematically assume community groups represent refugees asylum seekers ignore transnational differences and tensions that can exist in marginalised communities. However it should be pointed out that the discourses about place, nationality and identity and `natural' communities can also be used by the powerless to resist their marginalised and excluded positions.
PUBLISHER_LOCATION
ISBN_ISSN
EDITION
URL
DOI_LINK10.1016/S0016-7185(01)00009-4 |
FUNDING_BODY
GRANT_DETAILS