Refugees and Asylum Seekers Dispersed in Non-Metropolitan French Cities: Do Housing Opportunities Mean Housing Access?

Since 2015, policies for resettling asylum seekers and refugees in European cities have renewed the debate over the governance of migration, while not only metropolises but also small towns and mid-sized cities emerge as, although not new, at least specific arrival spaces. National dispersion polici...

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Main Authors: Camille Gardesse, Christine Lelevrier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2020-07-01
Series:Urban Planning
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/2926
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spelling doaj-dab21bf230fd45278982581d4a58309a2020-11-25T03:49:30ZengCogitatioUrban Planning2183-76352020-07-015313814910.17645/up.v5i3.29261569Refugees and Asylum Seekers Dispersed in Non-Metropolitan French Cities: Do Housing Opportunities Mean Housing Access?Camille Gardesse0Christine Lelevrier1Lab’Urba, University of Paris-Est Créteil, FranceLab’Urba, University of Paris-Est Créteil, FranceSince 2015, policies for resettling asylum seekers and refugees in European cities have renewed the debate over the governance of migration, while not only metropolises but also small towns and mid-sized cities emerge as, although not new, at least specific arrival spaces. National dispersion policies are assigning these asylum seekers and refugees to small and mid-sized cities that are presumed to provide housing opportunities. However, little is known about access to housing and residential trajectories in these specific urban and socio-economic contexts. This article analyses how the housing providers—either state agencies, managers of temporary accommodation centres or social housing organisations—are adjusting to the arrival and needs of asylum seekers and refugees in cities where there is usually less ethnic diversity. We demonstrate that access to housing and residential trajectories tends to be determined by dispersion and mainstream social mix policies, from national to local arrangements. However, we argue that some pragmatic local practices have reframed this pattern to provide housing solutions that may be contrary to national policies. Our article will be based on 84 in-depth interviews conducted with housing providers, NGOs and with asylum seekers and refugees in three small and mid-sized French cities.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/2926asylum seekershousing accesslocal planningmid-sized citiespolicies of dispersionrefugeessmall citiessocial and ethnic mix
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language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Camille Gardesse
Christine Lelevrier
spellingShingle Camille Gardesse
Christine Lelevrier
Refugees and Asylum Seekers Dispersed in Non-Metropolitan French Cities: Do Housing Opportunities Mean Housing Access?
Urban Planning
asylum seekers
housing access
local planning
mid-sized cities
policies of dispersion
refugees
small cities
social and ethnic mix
author_facet Camille Gardesse
Christine Lelevrier
author_sort Camille Gardesse
title Refugees and Asylum Seekers Dispersed in Non-Metropolitan French Cities: Do Housing Opportunities Mean Housing Access?
title_short Refugees and Asylum Seekers Dispersed in Non-Metropolitan French Cities: Do Housing Opportunities Mean Housing Access?
title_full Refugees and Asylum Seekers Dispersed in Non-Metropolitan French Cities: Do Housing Opportunities Mean Housing Access?
title_fullStr Refugees and Asylum Seekers Dispersed in Non-Metropolitan French Cities: Do Housing Opportunities Mean Housing Access?
title_full_unstemmed Refugees and Asylum Seekers Dispersed in Non-Metropolitan French Cities: Do Housing Opportunities Mean Housing Access?
title_sort refugees and asylum seekers dispersed in non-metropolitan french cities: do housing opportunities mean housing access?
publisher Cogitatio
series Urban Planning
issn 2183-7635
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Since 2015, policies for resettling asylum seekers and refugees in European cities have renewed the debate over the governance of migration, while not only metropolises but also small towns and mid-sized cities emerge as, although not new, at least specific arrival spaces. National dispersion policies are assigning these asylum seekers and refugees to small and mid-sized cities that are presumed to provide housing opportunities. However, little is known about access to housing and residential trajectories in these specific urban and socio-economic contexts. This article analyses how the housing providers—either state agencies, managers of temporary accommodation centres or social housing organisations—are adjusting to the arrival and needs of asylum seekers and refugees in cities where there is usually less ethnic diversity. We demonstrate that access to housing and residential trajectories tends to be determined by dispersion and mainstream social mix policies, from national to local arrangements. However, we argue that some pragmatic local practices have reframed this pattern to provide housing solutions that may be contrary to national policies. Our article will be based on 84 in-depth interviews conducted with housing providers, NGOs and with asylum seekers and refugees in three small and mid-sized French cities.
topic asylum seekers
housing access
local planning
mid-sized cities
policies of dispersion
refugees
small cities
social and ethnic mix
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/2926
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