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Seeking Asylum - Finding a Home?A qualitative study on asylum seekers’ integration in two different housing contexts

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Seeking Asylum - Finding a Home?

A qualitative study on asylum seekers’

integration in two different housing contexts

LINA SANDSTRÖM

Sociology

Örebro Studies in Sociology 22 I

ÖREBRO 2020

ÖREBRO STUDIES IN SOCIOLOGY 22 2020

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lina sandström (b.1981) is a sociologist at Örebro University. Seeking Asylum - Finding a Home? A qualitative

study on asylum seekers’ integration in two different housing contexts is her doctoral thesis.

The overall aim of this thesis is to contribute to a sociological understanding of integration by exploring how asylum seekers in Sweden make sense of their own position in relation to the society they are living in. Integration is conceptualised as a mutual process, the end goal of which is equal participation and belonging to a given society. Syrian refugees were interviewed on two occasions in order to follow their integration process as they moved from the precariousness as asylum seekers to the relative stability as residents.

The thesis also aims to explore what role different housing forms have in shaping their integration process, and the interviews were conducted in two locations: one dominated by Migration Agency housing (ABO) the other by ‘own housing’ (EBO). EBO is often portrayed as an ‘integration problem’ but when such arguments are made, the asylum seeker’s perspective is rarely considered. This study addresses this shortcoming and asks: How do asylum seekers make sense of their integration process? What obstacles and opportu-nities do they experience in this process? What role does the type of housing, and its context, play in this process?

Using Ager and Strang’s ten core domains of integration as an analytical framework, the study shows how asylum seekers’ access to participation is severely limited, not least because they lack the foundation of formal rights. A residence permit does offer a sense of stability in this respect, but stability in other domains is still elusive. Social connections, employment and housing are central domains where stability in one domain often has to be sacrificed to achieve stability in another.

Viewing these results through the lens of classical sociology, and the con-cepts ‘community’ and ‘society’, shows how the participants make sense of integration on a more abstract level. Society, defined as a sense of belonging based on contribution (through paid work), was important in both locations. Community, defined as a sense of belonging based on similarity, was emphasised more in the EBO location. However, portraying this as an ‘integration prob-lem’, as is often done in policy, misses the complexity of the situation and the ‘solutions’ presented risk being counterproductive.

issn 1650-2531 isbn 978-91-7529-336-3

Doctoral Dissertation

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References

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