This article challenges the widespread view of mobile connectivity as a purely utilitarian resource that refugees use at their individual discretion to resolve problems and cover needs. It explains that while this approach fits into well-intended humanitarian efforts, it carries important empirical and political costs. Both sets of costs are examined. Cues from existing research and an exploratory study among Syrian refugees in the Netherlands reveal the empirical costs: They point to various ways in which mobile connectivity can be both a desired toolkit and an uncomfortable imposition. Although these are novel findings in relation to migration, they resonate with the broader literature on non- utilitarian as well as paradoxical uses of mo...
This thesis is an exploration into the role of new digital technologies for the mobile practices of ...
In this paper we examine how highly vulnerable migrants who exist at the margins of society use mobi...
This article reports on recent research examining refugees as a particular user group of communicati...
This article challenges the widespread view of mobile connectivity as a purely utilitarian resource ...
Although mobile phones (MPs) are inexorably changing the forced migration experience, the realm of d...
Abstract Although mobile phones (MPs) are inexorably changing the forced migration experience, the r...
Over the past decade, an expanding literature has explored the ways in which refugees rely on mobile...
This research examines the role of smartphones in refugees’ journeys. It traces the risks and possib...
This research examines the role of smartphones in refugees’ journeys. It traces the risks and possib...
This article presents results from in-depth interviews with 18 newly arrived refugees in 2016, focus...
Over the past decade, an expanding literature has explored the ways in which refugees rely on mobile...
For refugees from crisis regions in the Middle East, smartphones have proven to be useful on their j...
Building on the results of a qualitative study with 16 male refugees (mostly from Syria) settled in ...
Networked technologies are a key tool for today’s refugees; not only on the move but also upon arriv...
This paper explores the role of smartphones in facilitating the journeys of predominantly young, mal...
This thesis is an exploration into the role of new digital technologies for the mobile practices of ...
In this paper we examine how highly vulnerable migrants who exist at the margins of society use mobi...
This article reports on recent research examining refugees as a particular user group of communicati...
This article challenges the widespread view of mobile connectivity as a purely utilitarian resource ...
Although mobile phones (MPs) are inexorably changing the forced migration experience, the realm of d...
Abstract Although mobile phones (MPs) are inexorably changing the forced migration experience, the r...
Over the past decade, an expanding literature has explored the ways in which refugees rely on mobile...
This research examines the role of smartphones in refugees’ journeys. It traces the risks and possib...
This research examines the role of smartphones in refugees’ journeys. It traces the risks and possib...
This article presents results from in-depth interviews with 18 newly arrived refugees in 2016, focus...
Over the past decade, an expanding literature has explored the ways in which refugees rely on mobile...
For refugees from crisis regions in the Middle East, smartphones have proven to be useful on their j...
Building on the results of a qualitative study with 16 male refugees (mostly from Syria) settled in ...
Networked technologies are a key tool for today’s refugees; not only on the move but also upon arriv...
This paper explores the role of smartphones in facilitating the journeys of predominantly young, mal...
This thesis is an exploration into the role of new digital technologies for the mobile practices of ...
In this paper we examine how highly vulnerable migrants who exist at the margins of society use mobi...
This article reports on recent research examining refugees as a particular user group of communicati...