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Arranged or not Arranged : Transnational Marriages among Syrian Refugees in Germany

Shanneik, Yafa LU orcid (2023) In Politics of Marriage and Gender: Global Issues in Local Contexts p.109-124
Abstract
In Germany, since the outbreak of the Syrian war in 2011, family relations of Muslim Syrian refugees have become the focus of public attention (Jaraba 2019; Johansen 1991). The representation of Syrian refugee families exhibits an essentialised portrayal of Muslim women governed and controlled by religion and oppressive patriarchal social constrains. Syrian refugee women, whether already in or pursuing an arranged marriage, are regarded to be in suppressive marital and social relations and in need for governmental and/or non-governmental interventions to ‘liberate’ them (Rohe 2014). These interventions informed by this representation have two consequences for women. First, with the focus on the refugee as the ‘other’ inadequate attention... (More)
In Germany, since the outbreak of the Syrian war in 2011, family relations of Muslim Syrian refugees have become the focus of public attention (Jaraba 2019; Johansen 1991). The representation of Syrian refugee families exhibits an essentialised portrayal of Muslim women governed and controlled by religion and oppressive patriarchal social constrains. Syrian refugee women, whether already in or pursuing an arranged marriage, are regarded to be in suppressive marital and social relations and in need for governmental and/or non-governmental interventions to ‘liberate’ them (Rohe 2014). These interventions informed by this representation have two consequences for women. First, with the focus on the refugee as the ‘other’ inadequate attention is paid to the political, socio-religious and economic circumstances leading women to pursue an arranged marriage. Second, the portrayal of a monolithic model of gender relations as existent within Muslim Syrian refugee families prevents the understanding of complex dynamics and of plural and diverse family relationships.

Syrian refugees, as others, are bound to stay in a designated refugee reception centre (Aufnahmeeinrichtungen) until their asylum application has been decided upon. They very often also have to remain in a specific state (Bundesland) after asylum has been granted for up to three years. This long-term restricted mobility contributes to a lack of social cohesion with members of the host society. The social interaction is therefore minimal between asylum seekers living in these centres and German host society. This enforced segregation has caused feelings of marginalisation, insecurity and restlessness among women in particular. We argue in this chapter that Germany’s policy on refugees’ mobility forces women to opt for an arranged marriage as they have to rely on transnational networks of kinship relations in Syria to locate spouses in other parts of Germany. (Less)
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author
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
host publication
Arranged Marriage : The Politics of Tradition, Resistance, and Change - The Politics of Tradition, Resistance, and Change
series title
Politics of Marriage and Gender: Global Issues in Local Contexts
editor
Berta, Péter
pages
15 pages
publisher
MIT Press
ISBN
9781978822849
9781978822863
9781978822825
9781978822832
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
3e4b4fe7-67ad-464b-bc8a-9b2857ed2676
date added to LUP
2024-05-16 15:43:34
date last changed
2024-05-17 14:38:23
@inbook{3e4b4fe7-67ad-464b-bc8a-9b2857ed2676,
  abstract     = {{In Germany, since the outbreak of the Syrian war in 2011, family relations of Muslim Syrian refugees have become the focus of public attention (Jaraba 2019; Johansen 1991). The representation of Syrian refugee families exhibits an essentialised portrayal of Muslim women governed and controlled by religion and oppressive patriarchal social constrains. Syrian refugee women, whether already in or pursuing an arranged marriage, are regarded to be in suppressive marital and social relations and in need for governmental and/or non-governmental interventions to ‘liberate’ them (Rohe 2014). These interventions informed by this representation have two consequences for women. First, with the focus on the refugee as the ‘other’ inadequate attention is paid to the political, socio-religious and economic circumstances leading women to pursue an arranged marriage. Second, the portrayal of a monolithic model of gender relations as existent within Muslim Syrian refugee families prevents the understanding of complex dynamics and of plural and diverse family relationships.<br/><br/>Syrian refugees, as others, are bound to stay in a designated refugee reception centre (Aufnahmeeinrichtungen) until their asylum application has been decided upon. They very often also have to remain in a specific state (Bundesland) after asylum has been granted for up to three years. This long-term restricted mobility contributes to a lack of social cohesion with members of the host society. The social interaction is therefore minimal between asylum seekers living in these centres and German host society. This enforced segregation has caused feelings of marginalisation, insecurity and restlessness among women in particular. We argue in this chapter that Germany’s policy on refugees’ mobility forces women to opt for an arranged marriage as they have to rely on transnational networks of kinship relations in Syria to locate spouses in other parts of Germany.}},
  author       = {{Shanneik, Yafa}},
  booktitle    = {{Arranged Marriage : The Politics of Tradition, Resistance, and Change}},
  editor       = {{Berta, Péter}},
  isbn         = {{9781978822849}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{03}},
  pages        = {{109--124}},
  publisher    = {{MIT Press}},
  series       = {{Politics of Marriage and Gender: Global Issues in Local Contexts}},
  title        = {{Arranged or not Arranged : Transnational Marriages among Syrian Refugees in Germany}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}