'That's not how you do it': Moralising the migrant in the Norwegian outdoors

被引:2
作者
Anderson, Sarah [1 ,2 ]
Rortveit, Hilde Nymoen [1 ]
Setten, Gunhild [1 ]
机构
[1] Norwegian Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Geog, Trondheim, Norway
[2] Norwegian Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Geog, NO-7491 Trondheim, Norway
关键词
Moral geography; Citizenship; Social inclusion; Refugees; Outdoor recreation; Norway; MULTICULTURAL CITY; CITIZENSHIP; DIFFERENCE; MOBILITY;
D O I
10.1016/j.geoforum.2023.103903
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
Participation in outdoor recreational activities is encouraged as a successful method for refugees to learn Norwegian language and culture, based on an assumption that this facilitates social inclusion into Norwegian society. Whilst diversity and engagement in the outdoors is highly valued and strongly encouraged, much because of their social and health benefits, there is also much to suggest that the Norwegian outdoors works to include some more than others. The outdoors is, hence, not a neutral space for everybody to access and enjoy. This article engages with organisers of outdoor recreational activities, or friluftsliv, for refugees through an investigation of how and why organisers are 'engineering' the refugees' behaviours so as to fit established normativities and ideologies inherent in the outdoors. By drawing on conceptualisations of moral geographies and the 'moralisation of citizenship', the article identifies three categories of normativities which serve as a basis for a discussion of how the moral ordering of bodies contributes to a citizen-making project, aiming to create certain types of ideal outdoor citizens. The article also contributes to discussions of whether and how moralisation of citizenship can create a moral order that places newcomers as outsiders, fuelling already-existing challenges regarding inclusion and exclusion of refugees in Norwegian society.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 52 条
[1]   Constructing racial difference through group talk: an analysis of white focus groups' discussion of racial profiling [J].
Alegria, Sharla .
ETHNIC AND RACIAL STUDIES, 2014, 37 (02) :241-260
[2]   Ethnicity and the multicultural city: living with diversity [J].
Amin, A .
ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING A, 2002, 34 (06) :959-980
[3]  
Anderson S., Norsk Geografisk Tidsskrift-Norwegian Journal of Geography
[4]   'It Was Only When I Came Here that I Learned about Walking': Creating Meaningful Contact in the Norwegian Outdoors? [J].
Anderson, Sarah ;
Setten, Gunhild .
NORDIC JOURNAL OF MIGRATION RESEARCH, 2023, 13 (03)
[5]  
[Anonymous], 2016, Friluftsliv og innvandrere: En undersokelse av holdninger og erfaringer blant innvandrerfamilier i Oslo
[6]   When everyday life becomes a storm on the horizon: families' experiences of good mental health while hiking in nature [J].
Baklien, Borge ;
Ytterhus, Borgunn ;
Bongaardt, Rob .
ANTHROPOLOGY & MEDICINE, 2016, 23 (01) :42-53
[7]  
Beyer Broch T., 2018, Equilibrium Poems: An ethnographic study on how experiences in and with Norwegian friluftsliv challenge and nurture youths' emotion work in everyday life
[8]   The civic turn of immigrant integration policies in the Scandinavian welfare states [J].
Karin Borevi ;
Kristian Kriegbaum Jensen ;
Per Mouritsen .
Comparative Migration Studies, 5 (1)
[9]   Scandinavian exceptionalism? Civic integration and labour market activation for newly arrived immigrants [J].
Breidahl K.N. .
Comparative Migration Studies, 5 (1)
[10]   Philosophies of integration? Elite views on citizenship policies in Scandinavia [J].
Brochmann, Grete ;
Midtboen, Arnfinn H. .
ETHNICITIES, 2021, 21 (01) :146-164