2021
DOI: 10.1177/01708406211040214
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Syrian Women Refugees: Coping with indeterminate liminality during forcible displacement

Abstract: This paper examines how forcibly displaced people cope with prolonged liminality through identity work. Our paper is based on a longitudinal multiple case study of women refugees who fled Syria and experienced liminality in Amman-Jordan, The Zaatari Refugee Camp in Jordan and the United Kingdom. We contribute to the liminality literature by demonstrating how forcibly displaced people respond to extreme structural constraints and maintain cognitive control over their sense of selves during liminality with an en… Show more

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Cited by 44 publications
(43 citation statements)
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References 63 publications
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“…Dacin et al, 2018; David et al, 2020). A growing number of qualitative organization studies (Alkhaled & Sasaki, 2021; Cartel et al, 2019; Crawford & Dacin, 2021; Farny et al, 2019; Hultin et al, 2021; Lawrence & Dover, 2015; Siebert et al, 2017; Wright et al, 2021; Zilber, 2018) directly or indirectly grapple with place-sensitive questions to advance our understanding of how the materiality, location or symbolic meaning of specific places—such as communities (Vernay et al, 2022), buildings (e.g. Jones et al, 2019) or streets (e.g.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dacin et al, 2018; David et al, 2020). A growing number of qualitative organization studies (Alkhaled & Sasaki, 2021; Cartel et al, 2019; Crawford & Dacin, 2021; Farny et al, 2019; Hultin et al, 2021; Lawrence & Dover, 2015; Siebert et al, 2017; Wright et al, 2021; Zilber, 2018) directly or indirectly grapple with place-sensitive questions to advance our understanding of how the materiality, location or symbolic meaning of specific places—such as communities (Vernay et al, 2022), buildings (e.g. Jones et al, 2019) or streets (e.g.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Their paper, as well as that by Alkhaled and Sasaki (2022, in this issue), speak to the impact of macro-level phenomena such as diaspora (a massive type of displacement), revolution and warfare on the lives of individuals, and the importance that solutions, such as falling back on tradition, play in responding to disruption. These types of DDD can push people into a state of indeterminate liminality, leaving them stranded in disconnection from their previous macro-level sense of belonging (Alkhaled & Sasaki, 2022;Hultin, Introna, Göransson, & Mähring, 2022).…”
Section: Cross-levelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Refugee women's entrepreneurship research documented in international entrepreneurship journals and emerging from this region of the world, grew significantly following the onset of the war in Syria in 2011. This emerging research embedded in these contexts by scholars addressing Syrian refugee entrepreneurship in Jordan include works by Abuhussein (2022), Alkhaled (2019), Alkhaled and Sasaki (2021), and Refai et al. (2018), and in Lebanon by Bizri (2017), and Harb et al.…”
Section: Where From?mentioning
confidence: 99%