Study title
Precarious Places: Social Cohesion, Wellbeing and Place Attachment in Refugee-Host interactions, 2017
Creator
Study number / PID
853108 (UKDA)
10.5255/UKDA-SN-853108 (DOI)
Data access
Restricted
Series
Abstract
Lebanon has absorbed over a million people fleeing the conflict in Syria. Weak governance and limited resources threaten the wellbeing of newly arrived populations and exacerbate tensions with host populations. The protracted nature of the Syrian conflict requires consideration of long term solutions to the refugee crisis. This project uses place attachment to understand: a) wellbeing in precarious mobile populations; and b) root causes of social tensions between newly-arrived and host populations. The research does this by testing hypotheses on the role of place attachment in building resilience and the role of place identity in causing social tensions. Thus the project can inform interventions to build positive resilience and social cohesion in displaced and host populations. Ultimately, the viability and relative merits of long term solutions will depend on the nature of the place attachments of those affected.
Topics
Keywords
Methodology
Data collection period
10/07/2017 - 21/07/2017
Country
Time dimension
Not availableAnalysis unit
Universe
Not availableSampling procedure
Not availableKind of data
Data collection mode
Funding information
Grant number
IC160149
Access
Publisher
UK Data Service
Publication year
2022