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The Importance of subjectively constructed meaning: Integration viewed from the perspective of immigrants

The Importance of subjectively constructed meaning: Integration viewed from the perspective of immigrants
The Importance of subjectively constructed meaning: Integration viewed from the perspective of immigrants
In political discourse, as much as in social studies, the term integration is commonly viewed in the context of migration. On the basis of ‘objective’ indicators and statistical analysis, the level of integration is measured and assessed as ‘low’ or ‘high’, ‘sufficient’ or ‘insufficient’. This is the perspective of the receiving countries (not migrants), which clearly dominates in this field of study. Seeing this perspective as partial, we decided to ask migrants themselves what integration means to them. The analysis of the narrative interviews conducted with Ukrainian, Srilankese and Senegalese men and women living in the South of Italy has demonstrated that integration for them is more related to the notion of ‘good life’ than to a desire of becoming ‘one of us’. Our interviewees’ approach to integration is very pragmatic as pursuing their own life projects, even if they turn out to be relatively modest, is after all their main concern. From their narratives emerges an idea of integration as acceptance and satisfaction, but without aspirations for equality, participation and full social and political rights, which calls for more active integration policies.
1733-8069
110-131
Spanò, Antonella
04bbf1ad-79e4-4da5-8128-2a6f936518ae
Domecka, Markieta
b04b1c5d-2342-46d3-8239-d8c01aba763c
Spanò, Antonella
04bbf1ad-79e4-4da5-8128-2a6f936518ae
Domecka, Markieta
b04b1c5d-2342-46d3-8239-d8c01aba763c

Spanò, Antonella and Domecka, Markieta (2015) The Importance of subjectively constructed meaning: Integration viewed from the perspective of immigrants. Przeglad Socjologii Jakosciowej, 11 (3), 110-131.

Record type: Article

Abstract

In political discourse, as much as in social studies, the term integration is commonly viewed in the context of migration. On the basis of ‘objective’ indicators and statistical analysis, the level of integration is measured and assessed as ‘low’ or ‘high’, ‘sufficient’ or ‘insufficient’. This is the perspective of the receiving countries (not migrants), which clearly dominates in this field of study. Seeing this perspective as partial, we decided to ask migrants themselves what integration means to them. The analysis of the narrative interviews conducted with Ukrainian, Srilankese and Senegalese men and women living in the South of Italy has demonstrated that integration for them is more related to the notion of ‘good life’ than to a desire of becoming ‘one of us’. Our interviewees’ approach to integration is very pragmatic as pursuing their own life projects, even if they turn out to be relatively modest, is after all their main concern. From their narratives emerges an idea of integration as acceptance and satisfaction, but without aspirations for equality, participation and full social and political rights, which calls for more active integration policies.

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Published date: 2015
Organisations: Economy, Governance & Culture

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 407719
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/407719
ISSN: 1733-8069
PURE UUID: d8124648-e9a2-4506-a483-adbc05cead49
ORCID for Markieta Domecka: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8020-3075

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Date deposited: 22 Apr 2017 01:12
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 12:49

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Contributors

Author: Antonella Spanò
Author: Markieta Domecka ORCID iD

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