“…This is perhaps due to the fact that people experiencing persecution or armed conflict are in need of protection, regardless of their background, resources and class position, and also because they are people whose history of capitals has been erased, so that they are not seen as having, mobilising or deploying capitals (Bakewell, 2008; de Haas, 2009). Existing research on refugee trajectories, however, sheds light on how unequal they are when it comes to establishing a new life in a country of exile (Ababsa, 2015; Achilli, 2015; Doraï, 2004, 2009, 2015, 2016; El Helou, 2014; Human Rights Watch [HRW], 2016; Jaber, 2016; Lagarde & Doraï, 2017; Roussel, 2015; Saif & DeBartolo, 2007; Turner, 2015). Individuals and families who are able to seek refuge outside the borders of their home country may have options that are more or less dangerous, desirable and feasible.…”