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ID163783
Title ProperOvercoming bordering practices through the arts
Other Title Informationthe case of young Syrian refugees and their Danish counterparts in Denmark
LanguageENG
AuthorPace, Michelle
Summary / Abstract (Note)During 2014, Denmark received nearly 15,000 asylum seekers, almost twice the number from the previous year as more people fleeing Syria’s war fled to Europe. By 2016, Denmark succeeded in making the country highly unattractive as a destination for refugees fleeing war torn countries. The country introduced a controversial ‘jewellery bill’, placed adverts in a newspaper in Lebanon dissuading refugees from contemplating a trip to Denmark, and cut assistance benefits for refugees by half. These state bordering practices aimed at securing some kind of ‘Danishness’. This article aims at ascribing agency to young Syrian refugees in Denmark, who have experienced these bordering practices and who seek to counter these practices by participating in meaningful social interactions with their Danish counterparts. The empirical focus is an artistic enactment–a weeklong dance workshop that brought these youngsters together as a distinct form of practice that brings about the conditions of possibility for meaningful integration. Conceptually, it draws upon Arendt’s theory of action and notion of ‘plurality’ to frame how such encounters come about.
`In' analytical NoteGeopolitics Vol. 23, No.4; Oct-Dec 2018: p.781-802
Journal SourceGeopolitics Vol: 23 No 4
Key WordsRefugees ;  Lebanon ;  Europe ;  Denmark ;  Syrian Refugees


 
 
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