2012
DOI: 10.1111/bjso.12007
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‘They're more than animals’: Refugees' accounts of racially motivated violence

Abstract: Previous discursive research has found that minority group members may deny or downplay the existence of discrimination. However, to date little research has addressed the issue of violence against minority group members. This study therefore draws on interviews with asylum seekers and refugees in a Scottish city to analyse their reports of violence committed against them. One form of reporting violence was by way of a complaint available to any speaker, in making no reference to attributes of attackers of vic… Show more

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Cited by 48 publications
(94 citation statements)
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References 37 publications
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“…We interpret the presented instances of downplaying primarily as acts of constructing belonging. This is in line with an idea also brought forward by Kirkwood et al (2013) that denying discrimination or racism may relate to potential membership of the host society. For ethnic Finnish return migrants, who may identify (and who are also sometimes expected to identify) as Finns, being discriminated against by majority group members may be a particularly sensitive issue and difficult to reconcile with belonging.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 84%
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“…We interpret the presented instances of downplaying primarily as acts of constructing belonging. This is in line with an idea also brought forward by Kirkwood et al (2013) that denying discrimination or racism may relate to potential membership of the host society. For ethnic Finnish return migrants, who may identify (and who are also sometimes expected to identify) as Finns, being discriminated against by majority group members may be a particularly sensitive issue and difficult to reconcile with belonging.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 84%
“…This is in line with Verkuyten's (2005) finding that downplaying discrimination may be done by claiming discrimination to be dependent on the concerns and feelings of minority members themselves. Furthermore, this also functions as repair to earlier report of discrimination and positions the speaker as someone who is not a "whinger" (see Kirkwood et al, 2013).…”
Section: Downplaying Discriminationmentioning
confidence: 84%
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“…Furthermore, the asylum system itself may inflict a series of harms on people, through preventing them from working, through making it difficult for families to be reunited, through potentially unjust processes and through the use of detention and deportation (Bosworth, 2008). In addition, some asylum seekers may experience hostility, discrimination or violence at the hands of members of the local community (Kirkwood et al, 2013b). This being the case, the host society should acknowledge the harms that occurred in the country of origin as well as make good on the damage it may have inflicted during the asylum process.…”
Section: Moral Rehabilitation and Reintegrationmentioning
confidence: 99%