Social Currents
2019
Refugees’ Transnational Practices: Gay Iranian Men Navigating Refugee Status and Cross-border Ties in Canada (Article)
Karimi A.*
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a
University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
Abstract
Despite the rise in displaced population numbers, refugees’ transnational lives, and those of sexual-racial minority refugees in particular, have remained at the margins of transnational migration studies. In this article, I focus on the case of gay Iranian refugees in Canada and analyze their pre-migration transnational lives and understandings of the asylum process, their post-migration transnational ties, and their activism practices. I underline refugees’ transnational agencies and argue against the rhetoric that represents refugees as passive migrants whose emigration means detachment from home countries. Based on my field work findings, I endorse analytical and methodological shifts to simultaneously explore refugees’ pre-migration and en-route lives in addition to their post-migration lives to stress the power relations that, through social ties, affect refugees’ transnational practices. I connect transnational, forced, and queer migration literature to the Bourdieusian social theory and, in conclusion, argue that it is necessary to deploy de-nationalized methods of inquiry to account for intra-group diversities as well as border-crossing social ties in addition to economic ties. © The Southern Sociological Society 2019.
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85074043420&doi=10.1177%2f2329496519875484&partnerID=40&md5=c4dc73173e4926953241b6dbde878d6a
DOI: 10.1177/2329496519875484
ISSN: 23294965
Original Language: English