Migration and urban space in a small town in Catalonia: the contested neighbourhood

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Migration and urban space in a small town in Catalonia : the contested neighbourhood. / Lundsteen, Martin.

I: Migration Studies, 19.05.2023.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Lundsteen, M 2023, 'Migration and urban space in a small town in Catalonia: the contested neighbourhood', Migration Studies. https://doi.org/10.1093/migration/mnad009

APA

Lundsteen, M. (2023). Migration and urban space in a small town in Catalonia: the contested neighbourhood. Migration Studies. https://doi.org/10.1093/migration/mnad009

Vancouver

Lundsteen M. Migration and urban space in a small town in Catalonia: the contested neighbourhood. Migration Studies. 2023 maj 19. https://doi.org/10.1093/migration/mnad009

Author

Lundsteen, Martin. / Migration and urban space in a small town in Catalonia : the contested neighbourhood. I: Migration Studies. 2023.

Bibtex

@article{f1259c9d24e646b3bca25e84ed9f008a,
title = "Migration and urban space in a small town in Catalonia: the contested neighbourhood",
abstract = "While much contemporary analysis of social problems in disadvantaged neighbourhoods have ignored the deep connections between everyday interactions in space and the structural tensions due to ethnic, racial, class, and gender inequalities that underlie them, this article offers a critical analysis of the groupings put into practice locally in relation to space. Through an ethnography carried out in Salt, a semi-rural Catalan town, this article analyses the emergence and functioning of exclusionary visions on a super-diverse neighbourhood. It does so through a multi-dimensional analysis of the historical macro and micro processes of how resentment towards newcomers emerged in town. Through a mixture of method, such as a review of newspaper clippings from 2000 to 2013, 40 interviews, and participant observation carried out between 2011 and 2014, we see how the much-liked idea of a 'welcoming town' promoted by the city council, collides with the lived reality, where many Spanish nationals order the Centre neighbourhood in terms of 'those from outside' and 'the ones from here'. These divisions might easily cross boundaries of ethnicity and culture, and mainly refer to the temporal settlement of the inhabitants. However, in this case they coincide with the grouping of the long-established residents, former migrants from other parts of Spain and Catalans, in contrast to the newly arrived 'migrants'. This way, we see how social inequalities among residents foster internal divisions expressed through or in a competition over space, that is, residence and use of public space, while at the same time it structures the social understanding of them.",
keywords = "migration, social conflicts, urban space, small town, inequalities, ethnography, DIVERSITY, EXCLUSION, ETHNICITY, RACE",
author = "Martin Lundsteen",
year = "2023",
month = may,
day = "19",
doi = "10.1093/migration/mnad009",
language = "English",
journal = "Migration Studies",
issn = "2049-5838",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Migration and urban space in a small town in Catalonia

T2 - the contested neighbourhood

AU - Lundsteen, Martin

PY - 2023/5/19

Y1 - 2023/5/19

N2 - While much contemporary analysis of social problems in disadvantaged neighbourhoods have ignored the deep connections between everyday interactions in space and the structural tensions due to ethnic, racial, class, and gender inequalities that underlie them, this article offers a critical analysis of the groupings put into practice locally in relation to space. Through an ethnography carried out in Salt, a semi-rural Catalan town, this article analyses the emergence and functioning of exclusionary visions on a super-diverse neighbourhood. It does so through a multi-dimensional analysis of the historical macro and micro processes of how resentment towards newcomers emerged in town. Through a mixture of method, such as a review of newspaper clippings from 2000 to 2013, 40 interviews, and participant observation carried out between 2011 and 2014, we see how the much-liked idea of a 'welcoming town' promoted by the city council, collides with the lived reality, where many Spanish nationals order the Centre neighbourhood in terms of 'those from outside' and 'the ones from here'. These divisions might easily cross boundaries of ethnicity and culture, and mainly refer to the temporal settlement of the inhabitants. However, in this case they coincide with the grouping of the long-established residents, former migrants from other parts of Spain and Catalans, in contrast to the newly arrived 'migrants'. This way, we see how social inequalities among residents foster internal divisions expressed through or in a competition over space, that is, residence and use of public space, while at the same time it structures the social understanding of them.

AB - While much contemporary analysis of social problems in disadvantaged neighbourhoods have ignored the deep connections between everyday interactions in space and the structural tensions due to ethnic, racial, class, and gender inequalities that underlie them, this article offers a critical analysis of the groupings put into practice locally in relation to space. Through an ethnography carried out in Salt, a semi-rural Catalan town, this article analyses the emergence and functioning of exclusionary visions on a super-diverse neighbourhood. It does so through a multi-dimensional analysis of the historical macro and micro processes of how resentment towards newcomers emerged in town. Through a mixture of method, such as a review of newspaper clippings from 2000 to 2013, 40 interviews, and participant observation carried out between 2011 and 2014, we see how the much-liked idea of a 'welcoming town' promoted by the city council, collides with the lived reality, where many Spanish nationals order the Centre neighbourhood in terms of 'those from outside' and 'the ones from here'. These divisions might easily cross boundaries of ethnicity and culture, and mainly refer to the temporal settlement of the inhabitants. However, in this case they coincide with the grouping of the long-established residents, former migrants from other parts of Spain and Catalans, in contrast to the newly arrived 'migrants'. This way, we see how social inequalities among residents foster internal divisions expressed through or in a competition over space, that is, residence and use of public space, while at the same time it structures the social understanding of them.

KW - migration

KW - social conflicts

KW - urban space

KW - small town

KW - inequalities

KW - ethnography

KW - DIVERSITY

KW - EXCLUSION

KW - ETHNICITY

KW - RACE

U2 - 10.1093/migration/mnad009

DO - 10.1093/migration/mnad009

M3 - Journal article

JO - Migration Studies

JF - Migration Studies

SN - 2049-5838

ER -

ID: 347476650