“We’re not that much different from you!”: navigating positions of betweenness to explore solidarity, care and vulnerability in refugee and forced migration research

Publication date

2024-04

Authors

Huizinga, RikORCID 0000-0001-6443-5108ISNI 0000000505643192

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

This paper argues that through reflexive examination of positions of betweenness in research relationships, insights are gathered that help to understand and address the often-contested research spaces in refugee and forced migration research. Following the completion of a research project with Syrian male refugees in the Netherlands, I investigate how multiple identities and shifting social positions impact research relationships, ethical considerations and knowledge production. Over time, the Syrian men and I occupy various positions due to the intersections of gender, generation, religion, ethnicity and migration status, shifting emphasis between similarities and differences. I show that a focus on positions of betweenness within these relationships may lead to sites of trust and solidarity, mutual acts of support and care, and insights into mutual vulnerability. As a result, the paper first highlights positions of betweenness as a strategy to develop ethical research practices by speaking to wider contexts of social and cultural inequalities and to momentarily transfer some of the power in the research process to participants. Second, the paper demonstrates that novel insights into the dynamic and messy nature of refugees’ everyday lives are gained as insights into betweenness allow both the ‘normal’ and the ‘vulnerable’ to surface.

Keywords

Positionality, Syrian refugees, reciprocity, reflexivity, research relationships, situated knowledge, Cultural Studies, Geography, Planning and Development, SDG 10 - Reduced Inequalities

Citation

Huizinga, R P 2024, '“We’re not that much different from you!” : navigating positions of betweenness to explore solidarity, care and vulnerability in refugee and forced migration research', Social and Cultural Geography, vol. 25, no. 4, pp. 620-638. https://doi.org/10.1080/14649365.2023.2186472