Minoritizing Processes and Power Relations between Volunteers and Immigrant Participants - An Example from Norway
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24396Dato
2022-03-07Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Stein, Barbara S.Sammendrag
The voluntary sector is a strong pillar in Norwegian society and has in recent
years gained increasing attention as an arena for integration. Though voluntary
activities can be valuable door openers for (recently arrived) immigrants, they
may, under certain circumstances, contribute to minoritization processes.
In this exploratory article, I will investigate social connections and relations
between (Norwegian) volunteers and immigrant participants based on a focus
group with eight participants involved in a community centre in a Norwegian
town through analysing the volunteers’ ideas of how the voluntary sector
can contribute to integration processes of immigrants. Special attention will
be paid to some of the participants’ behaviour towards the only immigrant
participating in the focus group, as this behaviour may reflect minoritizing
processes. This article aims to contribute towards a more nuanced picture
of what voluntary activities may achieve in terms of integration processes
and to bring to light potential risks of creating unequal power relations in
the social connections between (Norwegian) volunteers and immigrant
participants and facilitating minoritizing processes.
Er en del av
Stein, B.S. (2023). Integration and the Voluntary Sector: An Unfavourable Pairing, or the Perfect Match? - Exploring Integration Processes of Immigrants through and in the Voluntary Sector in Norway. (Doctoral thesis). https://hdl.handle.net/10037/31579.Forlag
Helsinki University PressSitering
Stein, B. 2022. Minoritizing Processes and Power Relations between Volunteers and Immigrant Participants—An Example from Norway. Nordic Journal of Migration Research, 12(1), pp. 21–37Metadata
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