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Bhimji, F. Asylum Seekers Struggle to Recover the Everyday: The Extended “Emergency Shelter” at Tempelhofer Feld as a Site of Continuous Crisis. Sociologus, 69(2), 105-125. https://doi.org/10.3790/soc.69.2.105
Bhimji, Fazila "Asylum Seekers Struggle to Recover the Everyday: The Extended “Emergency Shelter” at Tempelhofer Feld as a Site of Continuous Crisis" Sociologus 69.2, , 105-125. https://doi.org/10.3790/soc.69.2.105
Bhimji, Fazila: Asylum Seekers Struggle to Recover the Everyday: The Extended “Emergency Shelter” at Tempelhofer Feld as a Site of Continuous Crisis, in: Sociologus, vol. 69, iss. 2, 105-125, [online] https://doi.org/10.3790/soc.69.2.105

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Asylum Seekers Struggle to Recover the Everyday: The Extended “Emergency Shelter” at Tempelhofer Feld as a Site of Continuous Crisis

Bhimji, Fazila

Sociologus, Vol. 69 (2019), Iss. 2 : pp. 105–125

4 Citations (CrossRef)

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Senior Lecturer, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Central Lancashire, Preston PR1 2HE, UK.

Cited By

  1. Refugee Identity and Integration in Germany during the European “Migration Crisis”: Why Local Community Support Matters, and Why Policy Gets It Wrong

    Lienen, Carmen S. | LeRoux-Rutledge, Emily

    Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies, Vol. (2022), Iss. P.1

    https://doi.org/10.1080/15562948.2022.2098445 [Citations: 2]
  2. Agency in a quake in time: a study of jokes about the future among Pakistani migrant youth

    Lindsay, Rachael

    Contemporary South Asia, Vol. 30 (2022), Iss. 2 P.166

    https://doi.org/10.1080/09584935.2022.2057438 [Citations: 0]
  3. Border Regimes, Racialisation Processes and Resistance in Germany

    The Everyday Racialisation of Refugees in German State and Society

    Bhimji, Fazila

    2020

    https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-49320-2_2 [Citations: 0]
  4. Border Regimes, Racialisation Processes and Resistance in Germany

    Introduction

    Bhimji, Fazila

    2020

    https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-49320-2_1 [Citations: 0]

Abstract

This study describes how the iconic hangars at Tempelhofer Feld, which are designed to accommodate asylum-seekers temporarily prior to relocating them to various other parts of Germany, have for some of them turned into a more permanent and more regimented site of accommodation in Berlin. The shelters have housed several hundred asylum-seekers for two and a half years, and in many respects they contradict the so-called Willkommenskultur (‘welcome culture’) on which Germany has prided itself. Drawing on Vigh’s (2008) notion of continuous crisis, this study argues that these asylum-seekers have found themselves residing in a state of perpetual regimentation, which they understand as detrimental to their well-being. It also shows that they have nevertheless sought to find well-being and to dignify their lives by striving to normalize this situation.

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Fazila Bhimji: Asylum Seekers Struggle to Recover the Everyday: The Extended “Emergency Shelter” at Tempelhofer Feld as a Site of Continuous Crisis 1
Abstract 1
1. Introduction 1
2. Refugee Shelters as Closed and Politicized Spaces 4
3. Field Methods 7
4. The THF Hangars as Protracted Emergency Shelters 7
5. The THF Cafe 1
6. The Workshops, Volunteers, and Networking 1
7. Resisting the Shelter’s Food 1
8. At the City Parks, the Mosque, Practicums and Language Schools 1
9. Conclusion 1
References 1