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Post-Script : Ruptures in Time and Space

Turner, Simon LU (2023) In Conflict and Society 9(1). p.167-172
Abstract
We all know that conflict creates displacement. Life becomes untenable in different ways, and people are forced to move; the majority ending up as internally displaced people within the nation-state, while others wind up in refugee camps in neighboring countries, and a very few seek asylum in faraway places. The recent war in Ukraine and the conflict in Syria since 2011 seemingly fit into this classical conception of why and how people are displaced. Sudden violent events forced them to run for their lives. Often, we perceive the flight as a one-way movement in space and time, as people move from hot spaces in search of cool ground. However, the journeys are most often more complicated—even in seemingly straightforward cases like Ukraine... (More)
We all know that conflict creates displacement. Life becomes untenable in different ways, and people are forced to move; the majority ending up as internally displaced people within the nation-state, while others wind up in refugee camps in neighboring countries, and a very few seek asylum in faraway places. The recent war in Ukraine and the conflict in Syria since 2011 seemingly fit into this classical conception of why and how people are displaced. Sudden violent events forced them to run for their lives. Often, we perceive the flight as a one-way movement in space and time, as people move from hot spaces in search of cool ground. However, the journeys are most often more complicated—even in seemingly straightforward cases like Ukraine and Syria. Decisions to move are made gradually, in steps and at times in leaps, sometimes stopping along the way, at other times being temporarily reversed, as individuals and families continue to engage with the conflict, assessing its potential to diffuse, escalate or morph into something else (; Collyer and de Haas 2012). This collection engages closely with these processes as they unfold in the intimate sphere of family and friends while keeping in mind that the conflict in Syria is still there and it still plays an active role in displaced Syrians’ present lives and plans for futures. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Conflict and Society
volume
9
issue
1
pages
6 pages
publisher
Berghahn Journals
external identifiers
  • scopus:85169702463
ISSN
2164-4543
DOI
10.3167/arcs.2023.090111
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
746cbd33-e29e-4874-b20d-3828066ca04f
date added to LUP
2023-11-06 11:21:19
date last changed
2023-11-06 11:21:19
@article{746cbd33-e29e-4874-b20d-3828066ca04f,
  abstract     = {{We all know that conflict creates displacement. Life becomes untenable in different ways, and people are forced to move; the majority ending up as internally displaced people within the nation-state, while others wind up in refugee camps in neighboring countries, and a very few seek asylum in faraway places. The recent war in Ukraine and the conflict in Syria since 2011 seemingly fit into this classical conception of why and how people are displaced. Sudden violent events forced them to run for their lives. Often, we perceive the flight as a one-way movement in space and time, as people move from hot spaces in search of cool ground. However, the journeys are most often more complicated—even in seemingly straightforward cases like Ukraine and Syria. Decisions to move are made gradually, in steps and at times in leaps, sometimes stopping along the way, at other times being temporarily reversed, as individuals and families continue to engage with the conflict, assessing its potential to diffuse, escalate or morph into something else (; Collyer and de Haas 2012). This collection engages closely with these processes as they unfold in the intimate sphere of family and friends while keeping in mind that the conflict in Syria is still there and it still plays an active role in displaced Syrians’ present lives and plans for futures.}},
  author       = {{Turner, Simon}},
  issn         = {{2164-4543}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{167--172}},
  publisher    = {{Berghahn Journals}},
  series       = {{Conflict and Society}},
  title        = {{Post-Script : Ruptures in Time and Space}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/arcs.2023.090111}},
  doi          = {{10.3167/arcs.2023.090111}},
  volume       = {{9}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}