This study compares the social use of space in the Palestinian village around the beginning of the 20th century to that in the Palestinian refugee camp in Jordan around them beginning of the 21st century. It examines the transformation from small-scale egalitarian social practices in the village of Deir Ghassanah to external discourses controlled by large-scale institutional powers in al-Baq a Refugee Camp. It analyzes the ways through which refugees have been able to reinvent their village life after being forcefully relocated in spaces that may not respond to their ritual practices and integrative social system but created by external institutions. Transformations in leadership structure, ownership patterns, and religiosity in both cases ...
Drawing on ethnographic field research, this analysis compares the evolution of refugee camps as inc...
This study interrogated the standard refugee domestic shelter, the organisation of the shelters, and...
Media coverage of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict does not necessarily enhance one’s knowledge or u...
Euro-Mediterranean Consortium for Applied Research on International Migration (CARIM)This paper expl...
This one day workshop will focus on the social and spatial organization of the camps, the social pra...
This paper explores the evolution of re-appropriated refugee dwellings in protracted scenarios in Jo...
From their emergence in the 19th century to their current global proliferation, camps have been crea...
This article examines the implications of long-term encampment and exile for the meaning of Palestin...
In Jordan, Palestine refugee camps have turned by time into socioeconomic centers of gravity and cor...
Hospitality provides a lens for understanding spatial relations of power and ethics. It seeks to unp...
The urgency in providing basic shelter for a large, displaced and distressed population frequently m...
Analyses of refugee camps have criticised Agamben's conceptualisation of exception, understood as th...
This Bachelor’s thesis aims to understand how symbolic boundaries between Palestinian refugee camps ...
Living in Refuge is a unique dense socio-historical portrait of two Palestinian refugee camps in Leb...
Since 1948, the everyday existence of Palestinians is characterised by manifold experiences of displ...
Drawing on ethnographic field research, this analysis compares the evolution of refugee camps as inc...
This study interrogated the standard refugee domestic shelter, the organisation of the shelters, and...
Media coverage of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict does not necessarily enhance one’s knowledge or u...
Euro-Mediterranean Consortium for Applied Research on International Migration (CARIM)This paper expl...
This one day workshop will focus on the social and spatial organization of the camps, the social pra...
This paper explores the evolution of re-appropriated refugee dwellings in protracted scenarios in Jo...
From their emergence in the 19th century to their current global proliferation, camps have been crea...
This article examines the implications of long-term encampment and exile for the meaning of Palestin...
In Jordan, Palestine refugee camps have turned by time into socioeconomic centers of gravity and cor...
Hospitality provides a lens for understanding spatial relations of power and ethics. It seeks to unp...
The urgency in providing basic shelter for a large, displaced and distressed population frequently m...
Analyses of refugee camps have criticised Agamben's conceptualisation of exception, understood as th...
This Bachelor’s thesis aims to understand how symbolic boundaries between Palestinian refugee camps ...
Living in Refuge is a unique dense socio-historical portrait of two Palestinian refugee camps in Leb...
Since 1948, the everyday existence of Palestinians is characterised by manifold experiences of displ...
Drawing on ethnographic field research, this analysis compares the evolution of refugee camps as inc...
This study interrogated the standard refugee domestic shelter, the organisation of the shelters, and...
Media coverage of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict does not necessarily enhance one’s knowledge or u...