Abstract

AbstractRefugees from the Global South face many challenges when they arrive in Europe, not least having their subjectivities and beliefs questioned as part of requests for them to adapt to the norms of the destination context. Although there has been much critical research on migrant integration and adaptation, few of these studies have used an intergenerational lens to investigate the experiences of refugee children and youth. This article addresses this research gap using a social navigation theoretical framework and qualitative data obtained from focus group discussions with Eritrean and Afghan unaccompanied minors, young adults, and parents. The findings demonstrate how challenges and resources associated with adaptation identified across generations were related to (a) the frequency and nature of interactions between refugees, their compatriots, and Norwegians; (b) learning the Norwegian language; (c) comprehension of Norway's bureaucratic welfare systems; and (d) accepting Norwegian cultural values while maintaining transnational cultural ties. Notably, unaccompanied minors, young adults, and parents all navigated dual cultures as part of efforts to achieve normative Norwegian markers of successful migrant adaptation. Significantly, the older generational groups had the most difficulty “breaking” into Norwegian society. Overall, it is argued that to understand better the challenges migrants face when they are required to adapt to a new life in a destination context and the implications of these challenges for their aspirations, it is important to include both a focus on how they move through the society (social navigation) and the interactivity between generations (intergenerational perspective).

Highlights

  • Statistics Norway (SSB, 2018) reported that 14.1% (8.6% from GlobalSouth) of the population are immigrants

  • Migration into Europe has become a significant topic since the influx number of people that migrated to Norway were refugees fleeing of people from conflict-ridden regions in the Global South in 2015. conflict, civil war, in countries such as Syria, Afghanistan, Norway has not been exempt from migration flows, and in early 2018, Eritrea, and Somalia (SSB, 2017)

  • We aim to explore and critically examine the strategies used by refugee children and youth as they attempt to achieve normative Norwegian markers of successful migrant adaptation

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Summary

Introduction

Statistics Norway (SSB, 2018) reported that 14.1% (8.6% from GlobalSouth) of the population are immigrants. Migration into Europe has become a significant topic since the influx number of people that migrated to Norway were refugees fleeing of people from conflict-ridden regions in the Global South in 2015. Conflict, civil war, in countries such as Syria, Afghanistan, Norway has not been exempt from migration flows, and in early 2018, Eritrea, and Somalia (SSB, 2017). Transnational mobility focuses on the movement of people across national borders and the subsequent production of and changes in social relations. The European Union's opening up of borders to enable free mobility for those within Europe (i.e., the Schengen countries) and the closing and tightening up of borders for those coming from without after the 2015 influx illustrates the complexities of mobilities in relation to migration (Cresswell, 2010). Mobilities are related to the transnational movement of people, and to movement within borders

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