How is it possible to gain a sense that you have a voice and that your life matters when you have lost everything and live your life as a ‘displaced person’ in extreme precarity? We explore this question by examining the mundane everyday organizing practices of Syrian refugees living in tented settlements in Lebanon. Contrasting traditional empirical settings within organization studies where an already placed and mattering subject can be assumed, our context provides an opportunity to reveal how relations of recognition and mattering become constituted, and how subjects in precarious settings become enacted as such. Specifically, drawing on theories on the relational enactment of self and other, we show how material-discursive boundary-mak...
peer reviewedThrough an in-depth ethnographic exploration of the experiences of three unaccompanied,...
This article aims to contextualize the entrepreneurial identity (EI) of Syrian refugees living outsi...
Based on ethnographic fieldwork over an 18 month period in London amongst people living and working ...
How is it possible to gain a sense that you have a voice and that your life matters when you have lo...
This collection contains English transcripts of twenty semi-structured interviews carried out in the...
Hospitality provides a lens for understanding spatial relations of power and ethics. It seeks to unp...
My dissertation focuses on the articulation of the concepts of precarity —i.e., temporary, affective...
This research explores the liminal and contested dimensions of borders, hence addressing the notion ...
Informal institutions are increasingly recognized as a core concept in our understanding of the orga...
Until recently, studies of hospitality have been less prominent within the broader context of studie...
Informal institutions are increasingly recognized as a core concept in our understanding of the orga...
This paper examines how forcibly displaced people cope with prolonged liminality through identity wo...
While eating practices fulfil a central role in expressing collective identities, they potentially t...
Refugee camps are predominantly labelled as spaces of exception, dispossession and waiting, yet crit...
On the basis of ethnographic fieldwork, this thesis sheds light on the experiences of urban Syrian r...
peer reviewedThrough an in-depth ethnographic exploration of the experiences of three unaccompanied,...
This article aims to contextualize the entrepreneurial identity (EI) of Syrian refugees living outsi...
Based on ethnographic fieldwork over an 18 month period in London amongst people living and working ...
How is it possible to gain a sense that you have a voice and that your life matters when you have lo...
This collection contains English transcripts of twenty semi-structured interviews carried out in the...
Hospitality provides a lens for understanding spatial relations of power and ethics. It seeks to unp...
My dissertation focuses on the articulation of the concepts of precarity —i.e., temporary, affective...
This research explores the liminal and contested dimensions of borders, hence addressing the notion ...
Informal institutions are increasingly recognized as a core concept in our understanding of the orga...
Until recently, studies of hospitality have been less prominent within the broader context of studie...
Informal institutions are increasingly recognized as a core concept in our understanding of the orga...
This paper examines how forcibly displaced people cope with prolonged liminality through identity wo...
While eating practices fulfil a central role in expressing collective identities, they potentially t...
Refugee camps are predominantly labelled as spaces of exception, dispossession and waiting, yet crit...
On the basis of ethnographic fieldwork, this thesis sheds light on the experiences of urban Syrian r...
peer reviewedThrough an in-depth ethnographic exploration of the experiences of three unaccompanied,...
This article aims to contextualize the entrepreneurial identity (EI) of Syrian refugees living outsi...
Based on ethnographic fieldwork over an 18 month period in London amongst people living and working ...