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E-grāmata: Crux of Refugee Resettlement: Rebuilding Social Networks

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While the worlds refugee population reaches record high numbers, countries offering third-country resettlement are increasingly shifting toward policies of exclusion and austerity. This edited volume envisions a more humane future for refugee resettlement. Combining anthropology with a variety of professional perspectives (education, health care, theology, administration, politics, and social work) ethnography is used to demonstrate the efficacy of programs and interventions that create and nurture social capital in culturally specific and accessible ways. The contributors present case studies of resettlement in the United States, England, Australia, and Canada and contend that social networks have an essential roleare the cruxin the reconfigurations of refugee well-being, belonging, and place-making vis-ą-vis the bureaucratic limitations of state and institutional factors. This book includes short contributions from refugees, representatives of resettlement organizations, and government officials, including Jhuma N. Acharya, Bimala Bastola, Khada Bhandari, Kiri Hata, Govin Magar, Madhu Neupane, Natacha Nikokeza, Angela K. Plummer, Lance Rasbridge, Chris Sunderlin, David Thatcher, and John Tluang.

Recenzijas

The Crux of Refugee Resettlement is an intriguing and uplifting exploration of the way that resettled refugees adapt to their new homes, focusing on the limitations of formal assistance programs and the central role played by social networks, solidarity and community-based action in the integration process. This is essential reading for policymakers, practitioners and researchers engaged in the issue of refugee resettlement. -- Jeff Crisp, formerly at the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees The Crux of Refugee Resettlement has strongly advanced the field of migration and refugee studies with this deeply insightful and comprehensive exploration of the complexities in the lives of displaced peoples and their making (remaking) of new homes. This human-centered book understands refugee strengths and possibilities while also discussing internal weaknesses and conflicts of the community, revealing a treasure of qualitative and partnership methodologies that have allowed the authors to gain trust of and access to the refugee and immigrant communities. It demonstrates the social capital, strengths, and strategies that refugees utilize to overcome poorly constructed and administered government policies, and presents new methods of understanding best practices.  Indeed, it becomes evident that refugees have much to teach all of us. -- Alan LeBaron, Kennesaw State University

List of Figures and Table
ix
Introduction xi
Andrew Nelson
Alexander Rodlach
Roos Willems
PART I CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORKS
1(56)
1 The Competing and Shifting Relevance of Social Capitals in Successful Refugee Resettlement
3(26)
Laura Heinemann
Claire Herzog
Margo Minnich
Celeste Mitchell
Laeth Nasir
Alexander Rodlach
Chaitri Desai
Melanie Kim
John Tluang
Govin Magar
2 Guatemalan Mayas in the American Midwest: Creative Intercultural Networking
29(28)
Martin Renzo Rosales
Juana Domingo Andres
Claire Herzog
PART II MENTAL HEALTH AND WELL-BEING
57(66)
3 Re-Imagining Home: Resilience and Social Networks among Resettled Refugees in Columbus, Ohio, United States
59(18)
Kelly Yotebieng
Surendra Bir Adhikari
Jaclyn Kirsch
Jennifer Kue
Angela Plummer
Jhuma Acharya
4 Reconstructing Social Ties: The Multiethnic Engagement Patterns of Refugees Residing within a North Carolina Settlement House
77(22)
Holly Sienkiewicz
Tracy Nichols
Sharon Morrison
Maura Nsonwu
Margaret Evans
Natacha Nikokeza
5 Community-Based Organizations and Psychosocial Care in the Bhutanese Refugee Diaspora
99(24)
Liana E. Chase
Madhu Neupane
PART III CITIZENSHIP AND BELONGING
123(90)
6 The Pitfalls of the Community Development Approach in Refugee Resettlement: Community Divisions among Bhutanese Refugees in Manchester, United Kingdom
125(20)
Nicole Hoellerer
Lance Rasbridge
7 Refugee Perspectives on Social Networks and the Resettlement Information Landscape in the United States
145(28)
Kathryn Stam
Chris Sunderlin
8 The (Re)Generation of Life in Resettlement: Birth and Social Connectedness for Central African Refugee Women in Australia
173(20)
Georgina Ramsay
Kiri Hata
9 The School Socialization of Young Nepali Women Refugees in a Medium-Sized Town in Quebec, Canada
193(20)
Beatrice Halsouet
Bimala Bastola
PART IV CITIZENSHIP AND BELONGING
213(64)
10 "There Will Never Be a Foreclosure in Our Community": Networks of Dependence in the Secondary Relocation of Nepali-Bhutanese Refugees
215(22)
Andrew Nelson
Khada Bhandari
11 Refugee Resettlements Divergent Outcomes: The Role of the Social Network in Housing Type and Location
237(18)
Audrey Lumley-Sapanski
Dave Thatcher
12 Emplacing Bhutanese Refugees in the Rust Belt: Work, Networks, and Mobility in Resettlement
255(22)
Joseph R. Stadler
Jay Breneman
Conclusion: Toward a More Humane Resettlement Policy---A View from Europe 277(6)
Roos Willems
Index 283(10)
About the Contributors 293
Andrew Nelson is assistant professor of anthropology at the University of North Texas.





Alexander Rödlach is associate professor of medical anthropology and psychiatry at Creighton University.





Roos Willems is cultural anthropologist at the University of Leuven.