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Journal article

Citizenship as a gift: how Syrian refugees in Belgium make sense of their social rights

Abstract:
While citizenship scholars have documented the increasing moralisation of immigration and integration policies, relatively few have explored how immigrants themselves make sense of their (partial) membership of European welfare states. Drawing on semi-structured interviews and participant observation with Syrian refugees, this article documents how they interpret and act upon the partial and limited citizenship status they are given in Belgium. We focus on one dimension of their experiences: their stigmatic dependency upon the Belgian welfare state. While their accounts can be partly understood as reproducing neoliberal discourses, we argue that they are also a strategic reaction against the dependency that is inadvertently created by European welfare states. From our respondents’ perspectives, their social rights thus appear not so much as entitlements to be claimed, but as a continuation of the humanitarian logic of the (unreciprocated) gift.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1080/13621025.2018.1561827

Authors


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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
SSD
Department:
International Development
Role:
Author


Publisher:
Taylor and Francis
Journal:
Citizenship Studies More from this journal
Volume:
23
Issue:
1
Pages:
43-60
Publication date:
2019-01-11
Acceptance date:
2018-12-15
DOI:
EISSN:
1469-3593
ISSN:
1362-1025


Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:1001482
UUID:
uuid:827c8fa0-cf2b-425b-805a-90979112f2dc
Local pid:
pubs:1001482
Source identifiers:
1001482
Deposit date:
2019-06-11

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