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Between return and resettlement: the formation of Iraqi refugee "communities" in Cairo and Amman

The purpose of this thesis is to investigate whether or not there is community formation among Iraqi refugees living in Amman, Jordan and Cairo, Egypt. These two countries were chosen as case studies because they offer an opportunity to analyze how different host country conditions in the Global Sou...

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Main Author: Minnick, Emilie K. B.
Format: Thesis
Published: AUC Knowledge Fountain 2010
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access_status_str Open Access
author Minnick, Emilie K. B.
author_browse Minnick, Emilie K. B.
author_facet Minnick, Emilie K. B.
author_sort Minnick, Emilie K. B.
collection Thesis
dc_rights_str_mv The American University in Cairo grants authors of theses and dissertations a maximum embargo period of two years from the date of submission, upon request. After the embargo elapses, these documents are made available publicly. If you are the author of this thesis or dissertation, and would like to request an exceptional extension of the embargo period, please write to thesisadmin@aucegypt.edu
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
description The purpose of this thesis is to investigate whether or not there is community formation among Iraqi refugees living in Amman, Jordan and Cairo, Egypt. These two countries were chosen as case studies because they offer an opportunity to analyze how different host country conditions in the Global South have an impact on the process of community formation. While Egypt is a signatory to the 1951 Refugee Convention and Jordan is not, access to rights in both countries is similarly restrictive. Furthermore, whereas there has been a long history of forced migration from Iraq to Jordan and Iraqi social networks are already in place, there were very few Iraqis living in Cairo before the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003. Community formation will be studied by examining social support networks, livelihood strategies, articulations of collective identities and community building initiatives of Iraqi refugees. Research for this thesis was conducted over a period of three months, through interviews with 24 Iraqis and 4 focus group discussions with a total of 25 participants. The study finds that Iraqi refugees use a number of different social networks to secure livelihoods, information about resources and resettlement, housing, and other necessities, but that these social networks are primarily family-based. There is no community formation in the form of collective pooling of material resources in host countries; instead, remittances from family members living in Iraq or in third countries are the main source of livelihoods. However, there are some emerging manifestations of a sense of community, including a strong discourse of a collective Iraqi identity and the rejection of sectarian identity, the development of new social relationships among Iraqi refugees living in host countries, and a few community building initiatives established to assist other Iraqi refugees in need. Among those Iraqi refugees who cannot return to Iraq and do not have the opportunity to be resettled in Western countries, community formation in Amman and Cairo will continue to develop as it will become a necessity for survival.
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license_str Creative Commons
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spelling oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-3112 Between return and resettlement: the formation of Iraqi refugee "communities" in Cairo and Amman Minnick, Emilie K. B. The purpose of this thesis is to investigate whether or not there is community formation among Iraqi refugees living in Amman, Jordan and Cairo, Egypt. These two countries were chosen as case studies because they offer an opportunity to analyze how different host country conditions in the Global South have an impact on the process of community formation. While Egypt is a signatory to the 1951 Refugee Convention and Jordan is not, access to rights in both countries is similarly restrictive. Furthermore, whereas there has been a long history of forced migration from Iraq to Jordan and Iraqi social networks are already in place, there were very few Iraqis living in Cairo before the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003. Community formation will be studied by examining social support networks, livelihood strategies, articulations of collective identities and community building initiatives of Iraqi refugees. Research for this thesis was conducted over a period of three months, through interviews with 24 Iraqis and 4 focus group discussions with a total of 25 participants. The study finds that Iraqi refugees use a number of different social networks to secure livelihoods, information about resources and resettlement, housing, and other necessities, but that these social networks are primarily family-based. There is no community formation in the form of collective pooling of material resources in host countries; instead, remittances from family members living in Iraq or in third countries are the main source of livelihoods. However, there are some emerging manifestations of a sense of community, including a strong discourse of a collective Iraqi identity and the rejection of sectarian identity, the development of new social relationships among Iraqi refugees living in host countries, and a few community building initiatives established to assist other Iraqi refugees in need. Among those Iraqi refugees who cannot return to Iraq and do not have the opportunity to be resettled in Western countries, community formation in Amman and Cairo will continue to develop as it will become a necessity for survival. 2010-01-01T08:00:00Z thesis application/pdf https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2077 https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3112/viewcontent/Emilie_Minnick_Thesis.pdf The American University in Cairo grants authors of theses and dissertations a maximum embargo period of two years from the date of submission, upon request. After the embargo elapses, these documents are made available publicly. If you are the author of this thesis or dissertation, and would like to request an exceptional extension of the embargo period, please write to thesisadmin@aucegypt.edu http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ Theses and Dissertations AUC Knowledge Fountain Refugee studies Egypt Jordan Migration Studies
spellingShingle Refugee studies
Egypt
Jordan
Migration Studies
Minnick, Emilie K. B.
Between return and resettlement: the formation of Iraqi refugee "communities" in Cairo and Amman
title Between return and resettlement: the formation of Iraqi refugee "communities" in Cairo and Amman
title_full Between return and resettlement: the formation of Iraqi refugee "communities" in Cairo and Amman
title_fullStr Between return and resettlement: the formation of Iraqi refugee "communities" in Cairo and Amman
title_full_unstemmed Between return and resettlement: the formation of Iraqi refugee "communities" in Cairo and Amman
title_short Between return and resettlement: the formation of Iraqi refugee "communities" in Cairo and Amman
title_sort between return and resettlement the formation of iraqi refugee communities in cairo and amman
topic Refugee studies
Egypt
Jordan
Migration Studies
url https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2077
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3112/viewcontent/Emilie_Minnick_Thesis.pdf
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