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Mano Candappa Institute of Education, University of London.

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Presentation on theme: "Mano Candappa Institute of Education, University of London."— Presentation transcript:

1 Mano Candappa Institute of Education, University of London

2 Refugees and asylum-seekers are physically and symbolically ‘out of place’, the ‘other in our midst’… (Benhabib, 2004)

3 Families 'Out of Place'  Displacement and changes in families  Displacement and education in a broad sense  Displacement and struggles for formal education

4 Two Research Studies: I ‘ Extraordinary Childhoods’ ESRC-funded research on the social roles and social networks of refugee children (Candappa and Egharevba, 2000) London-based study Individual in-depth interviews with 36 refugee girls and boys aged 11-14

5 Two Research Studies: II Education and Schooling for Asylum- Seeking and Refugee Pupils in Scotland (Candappa et al., 2007) funded by the Scottish Government Focus on two Scottish cities Total of 28 interviews with asylum- seeking young people and 14 interviews with parents across the two cities

6  Asylum legislation and policy ◦ politically sensitive area ◦ 5 major parliamentary acts on asylum since 1990 ◦ progressive reduction in financial and material supports; compulsory dispersal of people seeking asylum from London and the SE; marginalisation of people seeking asylum from mainstream services

7 Families 'Out of Place' Displacement and changes in family  Changes in gender role  Loss of status of breadwinner  Emotionally absent parents  Loss of kin networks and implications for children  Loss and family separation  Making new families – unaccompanied children

8 Displacement and Education in the Broad Sense  Original meaning of education ◦ To foster and support the general well-being and development of children and young people ◦ A process of upbringing  Parents as providers for children's needs (material, social, emotional) children as their dependants  Relationships between generations in family can be conceptualised as governed by hierarchical, informal, inter-generational contracts (Alanen and Brady, 1991)

9 Family Role Reversal through Displacement  Refugee children as language brokers ◦ Children's knowledge of language of host country through schooling makes parents dependent on children in host country ◦ Children's language brokering tasks (Vasquez et al., 1994) become critical to functioning of families, e.g., GPs, hospitals, local authorities ◦ Children's language brokering could involve parents having to reveal intimate details about themselves for transmission to a doctor, previously seen as culturally unacceptable

10 Family Role Reversal through Displacement  Fatma's story ◦ Fatma is a 14 year old Kurdish girl from Turkey. She takes care of her little brother, does housework, cooks the evening meal, while her parents are at work and her older sister is at college ◦ Fatma crucially negotiates with Home Office over her father’s deportation order ◦ Fatma finds herself in ‘intercalary’ position (Gluckman, 1973) facing parent as child and carer at the same time through language brokering  Displacement requires a re-thinking of family roles ◦ Different kinds of knowledge created under different circumstances

11 Displacement and Struggles for Formal Education  Case study of a dispersal area in Scotland  Large numbers of AS in a city where previously few refugees resided  Dispersed AS to be found mostly in deprived areas of city  With dispersal some schools changed almost overnight from being monolingual and mono- cultural to being multilingual and multicultural  City is now one in only three LAs outside London with more than 2,000 ASR pupils in school population

12 Displacement and Struggles for Formal Education  Case study of a dispersal area in Scotland  Focus on four inclusive schools  Compulsory dispersal meant AS highly visible in community and schools  Experiences of ASR students and families ranged from very positive to very negative  Schools largely played a positive part in students' lives  Schools reported to be welcoming to new students and provided help with settling in  Structured supports provided to students new to English

13 Negative experiences in Displacement  Racism and bullying ◦ Evidence that low-level racism and bullying can go unreported for fear of worsening the situation  Out of school issues ◦ Racism outside school meant that ASR students sometimes do not access after-school activities because of perceived personal danger ◦ Fear of street danger restricted children's social lives ◦ Some parents believed that racist attacks, though unreported, happen within as well as outside the school ◦ Somali parents in a deprived area reported stones being thrown at them and constant verbal abuse

14 Positive Experiences in Displacement  London: Fatma's hopes for the future ◦ ‘From my standing, everyone wants to study and wants to go off to university and become.. someone (..) I want to continue studying, I want to become an archaeologist, I love that job!'  Glasgow: Irfan's achievements ◦ 'I am now the school captain.. the first Asian school captain, and as school captain I chair the school's Pupil Council. I am also the leader of the Glasgow Student Council...'


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