Drawing on fieldwork carried out in 2002–2003, this paper reveals the complexity of interactions between asylum seekers in East Anglia as they negotiate the shared experience of place, the British immigration system and a common and competitive goal of attaining refugee status. There is tension and a distrust generated by people who are forced to live in an inter-ethnic community and share the competitive goal of obtaining immigration status. Yet, this forced coexistence forges strong friendships, alliances and collaboration amongst asylum seekers. It is in taking into account these seemingly contradictory interactions that marks the concern of this paper; the more that asylum seekers attempt to distance and differentiate themselves from th...
This study explores how the immigration status of the 'asylum seeker' impacts upon notions of 'iden...
This article is based on fieldwork (2002–2003) in Great Yarmouth and Norwich in Britain with asylum ...
Community is a key and contested concept much used in social sciences and public policy, including a...
Drawing on fieldwork carried out in 2002–2003, this paper reveals the complexity of interactions bet...
This ethnographic study of asylum seekers in East Anglia, UK, poses the following questions: how do ...
This paper explores the ways in which asylum seekers negotiate their relationship with British local...
This paper explores the ways in which asylum seekers negotiate their relationship with British local...
Recent discursive research has shown that constructions of place may function to regulate social rel...
Social empowerment and social engagement are notions not normally associated with the experiences of...
A thesis submitted to Middlesex University in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree ...
This paper explores the way in which service providers in East Anglia, a region of the United Kingdo...
Asylum Aid (1999) believes that asylum seekers tend to be represented as either victims or frauds. P...
This paper investigates the issue of trust, or mistrust, specifically in relation to single adult as...
This paper explores through a psychoanalytic perspective the construction of ‘whiteness ’ vis-à-vis ...
This paper explores the way in which service providers in East Anglia, a region of the United Kingdo...
This study explores how the immigration status of the 'asylum seeker' impacts upon notions of 'iden...
This article is based on fieldwork (2002–2003) in Great Yarmouth and Norwich in Britain with asylum ...
Community is a key and contested concept much used in social sciences and public policy, including a...
Drawing on fieldwork carried out in 2002–2003, this paper reveals the complexity of interactions bet...
This ethnographic study of asylum seekers in East Anglia, UK, poses the following questions: how do ...
This paper explores the ways in which asylum seekers negotiate their relationship with British local...
This paper explores the ways in which asylum seekers negotiate their relationship with British local...
Recent discursive research has shown that constructions of place may function to regulate social rel...
Social empowerment and social engagement are notions not normally associated with the experiences of...
A thesis submitted to Middlesex University in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree ...
This paper explores the way in which service providers in East Anglia, a region of the United Kingdo...
Asylum Aid (1999) believes that asylum seekers tend to be represented as either victims or frauds. P...
This paper investigates the issue of trust, or mistrust, specifically in relation to single adult as...
This paper explores through a psychoanalytic perspective the construction of ‘whiteness ’ vis-à-vis ...
This paper explores the way in which service providers in East Anglia, a region of the United Kingdo...
This study explores how the immigration status of the 'asylum seeker' impacts upon notions of 'iden...
This article is based on fieldwork (2002–2003) in Great Yarmouth and Norwich in Britain with asylum ...
Community is a key and contested concept much used in social sciences and public policy, including a...