2017
DOI: 10.1017/s0020743817000630
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Middle East Encounters 69 Degrees North Latitude: Syrian Refugees and Everyday Humanitarianism in the Arctic

Abstract: In late 2015, approximately 2,000 Syrian asylum seekers made their way into Norway via the Arctic passage from Russia. What ensued are “global moments,” breakthrough events that have reshaped lives and futures for both the refugees and those who aided them, and it is the latter group on which this article focuses. As refugees began arriving in Arctic Norway, Refugees Welcome to the Arctic, an ad hoc grassroots organization, was formed to assist them. This group of ordinary people, most of them with no previous… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…There probably is a mix of both altruistic and egoistic reasons for organizing activities for immigrants as seen here with Mette's behaviour towards Azmia (see also the study by Naguib 2017). The altruistic reasoning can be, as is the case with Mette's knitting café, to bring together (newly arrived) immigrants and long-term residents to give immigrants the opportunities to get to know locals and improve their language skills.…”
Section: The Volunteers' Rolementioning
confidence: 89%
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“…There probably is a mix of both altruistic and egoistic reasons for organizing activities for immigrants as seen here with Mette's behaviour towards Azmia (see also the study by Naguib 2017). The altruistic reasoning can be, as is the case with Mette's knitting café, to bring together (newly arrived) immigrants and long-term residents to give immigrants the opportunities to get to know locals and improve their language skills.…”
Section: The Volunteers' Rolementioning
confidence: 89%
“…In recent years, the concept of '(immigrant) integration' and approaches to study it have been increasingly under scrutiny in academia because of its unclarity and ambiguity (see among many others Korteweg 2017;Rytter 2018;Schinkel 2018;Sjørslev 2011;Wimmer & Glick Schiller 2002). In this article, I follow Naguib's example who chooses not to deconstruct the term (Naguib 2017). Instead, like Naguib, I will use 'integration' because it is the term the persons, I talked with, used.…”
Section: Framing the Problem: Integration Through The Voluntary Secto...mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The issues related to refugees are not new in the European experience (Paulgaard and Soleim 2023;Boe and Horsti 2019;Asfeldt et al 2018;Naguib 2017). Poland, having been a transit country for refugees for years, does not have much experience with problems in this regard (Weinar 2003).…”
Section: Introduction 1the Phenomenon Of War Refugee Children In the ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It developed, in 2011, from discontent with the regime's violent suppression of civil uprisings that formed part of the broader Arab Spring protests. Much of our understanding of the war's impact focuses on the experiences of Syrians displaced by violence and the untold forms of suffering they have endured both before and since leaving their country for highly precarious lives and futures in places within and far beyond the region (see, e.g., Maadad and Rodwell 2016; Baban, Ilcan, and Rygiel 2017; Naguib 2017; Pearlman 2017). The group of men I interviewed in Doha in 2017–2018 differ from this population.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%