Author: Zaman T.
Source:
Disasters. 2012 Jul;36 Suppl 1:S126-48. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-7717.2012.01286.x
The rise in the number of interventions by faith-based organisations in the
humanitarian field has reignited debate about the role of religion in the public
sphere. This paper presents a nuanced examination of the part played by religious
institutions and networks in the strategies of forced migrants in urban contexts.
Furthermore, it considers how such organisations work to integrate displaced
populations into their new surroundings. Drawing on two case studies and
ethnographic fieldwork and in-depth interviews with Iraqi refugees and refugee
service providers in Damascus, Syria, carried out between March 2010 and March
2011, it evaluates how Iraqi refugees, as active social agents, utilise religious
institutions and networks in conjunction with established international
humanitarian organisations to produce a distinctive geography of exile. In
addition, it draws attention to how the Syrian state exerts influence over
religious actors and how ultimately this affects the decision-making of forced
migrants.