TY - JOUR
T1 - Governing displaced migration in Europe
T2 - housing and the role of the “local”
AU - Meer, Nasar
AU - DiMaio, Claudio
AU - Hill, Emma
AU - Angeli, Maria
AU - Olberg, Klara
AU - Emilsson, Henrik
N1 - The underlying research funding for this article comes from the Joint Programming Initiative Urban Europe, with support from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme under grant agreement No 693443.
PY - 2021/1/25
Y1 - 2021/1/25
N2 - This article will explore the extent to which a focus on the ‘local’ can
tell us something meaningful about recent developments in the
governance of displaced migrants and refugees. Taking a multi-sited
approach spanning cases in the south and north of Europe, we consider
how the challenge of housing and accommodation in particular, a core
sector of migrant reception and integration, can shed light on the ways
local and city level approaches may negotiate, and sometimes diverge
from, national level policy and rhetoric. While it can be said that
despite variation, local authorities are by definition ultimately
‘always subordinate’ (Emilsson, Comparative Migration Studies, 3: 1-17,
2015: 4), they can also show evidence of ‘decoupling’ across geographies
of policy delivery (Pope and Meyer, European Journal of Cultural and
Political Sociology, 3: 280–305, 2016: 290). This article traces how
possible local variations in different European cases are patterned by
ground-level politics, local strategic networks, and pre-existing
economic resources in a manner that is empirically detailed through the
study of housing.
AB - This article will explore the extent to which a focus on the ‘local’ can
tell us something meaningful about recent developments in the
governance of displaced migrants and refugees. Taking a multi-sited
approach spanning cases in the south and north of Europe, we consider
how the challenge of housing and accommodation in particular, a core
sector of migrant reception and integration, can shed light on the ways
local and city level approaches may negotiate, and sometimes diverge
from, national level policy and rhetoric. While it can be said that
despite variation, local authorities are by definition ultimately
‘always subordinate’ (Emilsson, Comparative Migration Studies, 3: 1-17,
2015: 4), they can also show evidence of ‘decoupling’ across geographies
of policy delivery (Pope and Meyer, European Journal of Cultural and
Political Sociology, 3: 280–305, 2016: 290). This article traces how
possible local variations in different European cases are patterned by
ground-level politics, local strategic networks, and pre-existing
economic resources in a manner that is empirically detailed through the
study of housing.
KW - Migration
KW - Refugees
KW - Local
KW - Governance
KW - Housing
KW - Europe
U2 - 10.1186/s40878-020-00209-x
DO - 10.1186/s40878-020-00209-x
M3 - Article
SN - 2214-594X
VL - 9
JO - Comparative Migration Studies
JF - Comparative Migration Studies
M1 - 2
ER -