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dissertation (5)


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2019 (5)

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Dissertation
Borders, Belonging and (B)othering : An ethnographic approach to spatial manifestations of difference and inequality
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Year: 2019 Publisher: Leuven KU Leuven. Faculty of Science

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This doctoral thesis adresses the production of borders (bordering) that produce Flanders' contemporary Other on the axis of migration and poverty. Through four ethnographic studies presented as journal articles, this research explores the underlying, interactive dynamics that produce this Other, their impact and how and by whom they can be negotiated. This sheds light on experiences and interactions on the micro-level of society, as well as the role of intermediaries and gatekeepers at the meso-level. In addition, the work explores the possibilities and limitations of etnography: to what extent is this method able to assemble a bottom-up image of multiscalar phenomena like poverty and migration?An introductory chapter situates these research questions in their societal context, proposes a theoretical framework of othering and bordering to interpret exclusion processes, and critically reflects on research methods and science in a context of project-based and output-oriented research. Next, four studies adress the production of the Other respectively in context of the housing market, public space, the work place and non-urban environments.A first study focuses on strategies on the private rental housing market of low-income families on the one hand, and landlords and brokers on the other. The work shows that income-based selection and discrimination are dynamic and interactive. Aimed at opposing goals, actors at both sides of the rental market learn from one another, and mutually adapt their strategies. Due to the scarcity of affordable housing on the private rental market, people labeled as 'undesirable tenant' systematically get the short end of the stick. Candidate-tenants in poverty show awareness of their position as Other and creatively seek ways to cope with these unequal power relations and constantly changing selection and discrimination strategies.A second study shows the Other in the shape of young people, whose presence in public space is being problematized. While local policy makers increasingly emphasise control and social order, critical youthwork fights against the negative consequences of conflictual exclusion. They build networks and alter the dominant narrative, both among young people and their institutional surroundings. In this endeavour, they depend strongly on their immediate environment. The study shows that autonomy is crucial for the critical youth worker as professional intermediary, in order to attenuate oppositions and to find a balance between emancipation on the one hand, and the goals and logics of local policy makers on the other.A third study adresses the conditions that contribute to perceptions of diversity as (un)problematic at the micro-scale. We analyse how organisational and material constellations of two work places influence solidarity in diversity. From our cases, solidarity in diversity appears to develop best when enforces, repetitive intercultural contact takes place, in interdependency and in function of a clearly defined shared goal. Managers influence this proces by defining the goal for collective struggle, by organising interdepency in the workflow, by making encounter possible and necessary, and by creating place-based, shared norms and values. Inequality and discriminations on the workfloor in contrast lead to deviant norms, values and goals within subgroups, and negatively impact the organisational power of authority figures.A fourth chapter sews together the different life domains through a focus on how a sense of belonging develops in a rural context. The life history of a man born in Afghanistan shows how the construction of the Other produces specific mobilities, which continuously inform new aspects of one's position and identity. Simultaneously the study demonstrates how previous experiences and future projects shape interpretations of belonging. The joint analysis of this life history and one of a woman born in Congo, further reveals how a sense of belonging emerges through ongoing negotiation over borders, caught in a tension between stasis and movement, which never seems complete.The conclusion posits that the figure of the Other in its everyday imaginations is based on the logics and power (im)balances within specific spaces, in function of situated, mostly economic interests of dominant actors. The categories that inform this imagination are largely shaped at the macro-level and materialize on the local level. In consequence, resistance situated in the limited space for agency and negotiation at the microlevel rarely results in structural change. At this level, persons on the crossroads of migration and poverty in Flanders experience a cumulation of exlusionary mechanisms over different life domains. Critical social work at the mesolevel can counter or attenuate this proces, but is strongly dependent on its political context for results.

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Dissertation
Gold Mining in Skouries (NE Chalkidiki, Greece): Dynamics of the Resistance against Extractivism in the Global North
Authors: --- ---
Year: 2019 Publisher: Leuven KU Leuven. Faculteit Wetenschappen

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Extractivist activities have been widely studied within the field of political ecology due to their harmful environmental, social and economic impacts. The growing need for raw materials and the new approaches on mining established by actors such as the European Union, United Nations and the Word Bank lead to the need for further investigation. In this research, the case of gold mining in Skouries (NE Chalkidiki, Greece) is investigated, aiming at understanding the dynamics that led to the downfall of the resistance that has been taking place for the past 12 years against the Canadian companies present in the area. After conducting fieldwork and desk research, the narratives and strategies of the actors involved were analyzed through the lenses of Gramsci. The two Gramscian concepts that were used to interpret them are hegemony and passive revolution, which refer to the process of gaining consent and to the absorption of opposing narrative respectively. The outcome of this research is that there are multiple hegemonic processes realized in this struggle, one between the dominant actors and the activist and one among the activist. Eventually, it is showed that the latter contributed significantly to the deradicalization and silencing of the mobilization.

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Dissertation
Effects of ethnic profiling by the police on everyday life and spatiotemporal behaviour
Authors: --- ---
Year: 2019 Publisher: Leuven KU Leuven. Faculteit Wetenschappen

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This thesis looks at the experiences of people of ethnic minorities in their interactions with the police, and shows how ethnic profiling and racism manifests in these interactions. We take a look at the situation in the more or less rural Campine Region of Belgium. Through face-to-face interviews and expert interviews, a few questions get an answer: what are the experiences of people: What are the experiences of people of ethnic minorities with ethnic profiling? Are these experiences connected with single, “rotten apple” police officers or a sign of a wider problem with the police institute? What are the effects of racism and ethnic profiling by the police, both on personal wellbeing and the spatiotemporal behaviour of those affected? And what can be done about it? With the personal stories of people who have fallen victim to discrimination on the police, and the expert voices of researchers and people in the workfield, an answer to these questions is sought.

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Dissertation
Participation of girls in soccer: case study Flemish Brabant
Authors: --- ---
Year: 2019 Publisher: Leuven KU Leuven. Faculteit Wetenschappen

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Girls’ soccer is not yet very well developed in Belgium. Girls have to travel substantial distances, in order to find a club where they can train and play in an all-girls’ team. International research on female participation in sports show that distance can be an obstructing factor for girls to participate in sports. This thesis focuses on the impact of distance on girls that play soccer in Flemish-Brabant and the Brussels Region. Three research questions were distilled after interpreting international research on the subject. The first research question is whether there are different variables that dominate in different distances that the girls do towards the club. For that a comparison is made between distances of less than 3 km to club (near) and 3 to 10 km (average), on the one hand; and distances of 3 to 10 km (average) and more than 10 (long distance), on the other hand. The second research question investigates if there is a relationship to be found between the importance the girls attach to soccer, and the distance they have to cover in order to find a club, where they can play. The third research question looks into the perceived barriers and how they can be overcome and eventually be decreased by taking effective measures, so that more girls start playing soccer. To answer the first two research questions a questionnaire was sent out to girl players that practiced soccer. The data supplied by the questionnaire were analysed. In order to answer the first research question, a multivariate nominal logistic analysis took place. As for the second a regression analysis was chosen. For that purpose data supplied by 73 questionnaires filled out by the female players were available. To answer the third research question also data of 28 coaches, 10 clubs were taken into account, as well as 2 interviews with representatives at Voetbal Vlaanderen. The result of the multivariate nominal logistic analysis showed that girls living nearer or at average distance to the clubs have mostly a relationship with: “mode used: Bike” which is rather obvious. Comparing girls living at average distance and further distance, a relation was seen with the variables “time spent” playing soccer, and “profession of the mother: employee”. Nevertheless, all relationships were rather small. The second research question which focused on “how important is soccer for you”, as dependent variable, which showed a relationship with “there is no soccer club nearby”, but did not influence the distance. Using “time spent” as a variable only a relationship with the distance itself could be detected. The third research question was more complicated to unravel. Conclusion was, however, that mainly promotion by role models and organising events at school, where the girls felt comfortable and secure, seemed to increase the possibility to attract more future players. After all, this research gave an extra insight on how girls’ soccer develops slowly but positively, and how it still can make progress in the future. Although a lot of more in depth research is needed, to come to more comprehensive conclusions.

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Dissertation
An exploration into the changing rural landscape of a Turkish small town: the case of Ağlasun, Turkey

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This paper aims to look at how rural landscape of a small Turkish town, Ağlasun, has been impacted by changes from the mid-20th century to the present date. This was achieved by looking at the physical changes in the landscape and linking these changes with significant policy or developmental changes found in literature. Firstly, the agricultural landscape of the surrounding Ağlasun area is investigated, looking at how the size of farmer plots have changed and fragmented from 1955 to 2018, where the size of these plots have significantly declined. Subsequently, the changes in crop types were analyzed, as they were influenced by fluctuations in crop-based subsidies, improved irrigation, accessibility to higher yielding seeds and other agricultural advances. The second part looks at the changes and expansion of the Ağlasun town itself by taking the physical development and infrastructural alterations into account, and how the town has increased in both area and density over the time period from 1955 to 2018. The final part seeks to discuss the before mentioned findings with relation to literature found on the agricultural and urban changes in the landscape of Ağlasun.

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