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Relational Wellbeing in the Lives of Young Refugees

About Relational Wellbeing in the Lives of Young Refugees

In this Special Issue, we consider the ways in which a relational wellbeing approach can be used to understand the lives and trajectories of refugees in general and young refugees in particular. We mainly focus on the lives of young adults who came to the global North as unaccompanied children-that is, without an adult responsible for them when they claimed asylum. Many of the papers focus on 'relational wellbeing' for these young refugees-which often involves actions that repair and amplify a sense of social responsibility they and other people have to each other. Hospitality and reciprocity emerge through small acts of fellowship. In time, these actions lead to a mutual sense of 'having enough', 'being connected', and 'feeling good'. Wellbeing becomes a relational endeavour. Overall, the contributions in this Special Issue stand at the conjunction between fields of research into wellbeing and refugee studies. The papers span contexts and countries, offering an international array of experiences, joined by an issue of supra-national importance-that is, the ways interaction and relationality mediate the experiences of becoming and being a refugee.

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  • Language:
  • English
  • ISBN:
  • 9783725803071
  • Binding:
  • Hardback
  • Published:
  • February 28, 2024
  • Dimensions:
  • 170x244x18 mm.
  • Weight:
  • 635 g.
Delivery: 2-3 weeks
Expected delivery: December 13, 2024

Description of Relational Wellbeing in the Lives of Young Refugees

In this Special Issue, we consider the ways in which a relational wellbeing approach can be used to understand the lives and trajectories of refugees in general and young refugees in particular. We mainly focus on the lives of young adults who came to the global North as unaccompanied children-that is, without an adult responsible for them when they claimed asylum. Many of the papers focus on 'relational wellbeing' for these young refugees-which often involves actions that repair and amplify a sense of social responsibility they and other people have to each other. Hospitality and reciprocity emerge through small acts of fellowship. In time, these actions lead to a mutual sense of 'having enough', 'being connected', and 'feeling good'. Wellbeing becomes a relational endeavour. Overall, the contributions in this Special Issue stand at the conjunction between fields of research into wellbeing and refugee studies. The papers span contexts and countries, offering an international array of experiences, joined by an issue of supra-national importance-that is, the ways interaction and relationality mediate the experiences of becoming and being a refugee.

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