Choice or circumstance: The UK as the location of asylum applications by Bosnian and Somali refugees
Abstract Questions concerning why asylum seekers make their applications in particular countries rather than others have not been fully researched. Some explanation can be found via aggregate migration theories, but there is a need to consider the circumstances of individual movers. Respondents here...
Ausführliche Beschreibung
Autor*in: |
Day, Kate [verfasserIn] |
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Format: |
Artikel |
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Sprache: |
Englisch |
Erschienen: |
2002 |
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Schlagwörter: |
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Anmerkung: |
© Kluwer Academic Publishers 2002 |
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Übergeordnetes Werk: |
Enthalten in: GeoJournal - Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1977, 56(2002), 1 vom: Jan., Seite 15-26 |
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Übergeordnetes Werk: |
volume:56 ; year:2002 ; number:1 ; month:01 ; pages:15-26 |
Links: |
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DOI / URN: |
10.1023/A:1021700817972 |
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Katalog-ID: |
OLC211367789X |
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Choice or circumstance: The UK as the location of asylum applications by Bosnian and Somali refugees |
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Choice or circumstance: The UK as the location of asylum applications by Bosnian and Somali refugees |
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Day, Kate |
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Day, Kate White, Paul |
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10.1023/A:1021700817972 |
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choice or circumstance: the uk as the location of asylum applications by bosnian and somali refugees |
title_auth |
Choice or circumstance: The UK as the location of asylum applications by Bosnian and Somali refugees |
abstract |
Abstract Questions concerning why asylum seekers make their applications in particular countries rather than others have not been fully researched. Some explanation can be found via aggregate migration theories, but there is a need to consider the circumstances of individual movers. Respondents here were drawn from amongst Bosnian and Somali refugees in northern England. The interviews showed that asylum movement is of a variety of types, with two stage migration commonly involved – firstly immediate flight to a neighbouring haven, and secondly on to a more permanent place of settlement. Very few respondents had any real choice in where they ended up. Instead, family circumstances, cultural connections, and the actions of a variety of institutions produced scenarios in which there was generally no alternative to the actual destination arrived at. It is suggested that a mix of individual level and institutional explanations is needed to understand patterns of asylum destinations. © Kluwer Academic Publishers 2002 |
abstractGer |
Abstract Questions concerning why asylum seekers make their applications in particular countries rather than others have not been fully researched. Some explanation can be found via aggregate migration theories, but there is a need to consider the circumstances of individual movers. Respondents here were drawn from amongst Bosnian and Somali refugees in northern England. The interviews showed that asylum movement is of a variety of types, with two stage migration commonly involved – firstly immediate flight to a neighbouring haven, and secondly on to a more permanent place of settlement. Very few respondents had any real choice in where they ended up. Instead, family circumstances, cultural connections, and the actions of a variety of institutions produced scenarios in which there was generally no alternative to the actual destination arrived at. It is suggested that a mix of individual level and institutional explanations is needed to understand patterns of asylum destinations. © Kluwer Academic Publishers 2002 |
abstract_unstemmed |
Abstract Questions concerning why asylum seekers make their applications in particular countries rather than others have not been fully researched. Some explanation can be found via aggregate migration theories, but there is a need to consider the circumstances of individual movers. Respondents here were drawn from amongst Bosnian and Somali refugees in northern England. The interviews showed that asylum movement is of a variety of types, with two stage migration commonly involved – firstly immediate flight to a neighbouring haven, and secondly on to a more permanent place of settlement. Very few respondents had any real choice in where they ended up. Instead, family circumstances, cultural connections, and the actions of a variety of institutions produced scenarios in which there was generally no alternative to the actual destination arrived at. It is suggested that a mix of individual level and institutional explanations is needed to understand patterns of asylum destinations. © Kluwer Academic Publishers 2002 |
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Choice or circumstance: The UK as the location of asylum applications by Bosnian and Somali refugees |
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