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No Obvious Home: the Public’s Dialogical Creation of Home During the Third Wave of Decolonization

The global crises we currently face, ecological, refugee-related and dealing with austerity arising out of the Covid-19 pandemic share a common feature. Together they have the capacity to call into question shared understandings of what constitutes the physical, political and psychological boundarie...

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Autores principales: Mahendran, Kesi, English, Anthony, Nieland, Sue
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer International Publishing 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7881309/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s42087-020-00176-w
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author Mahendran, Kesi
English, Anthony
Nieland, Sue
author_facet Mahendran, Kesi
English, Anthony
Nieland, Sue
author_sort Mahendran, Kesi
collection PubMed
description The global crises we currently face, ecological, refugee-related and dealing with austerity arising out of the Covid-19 pandemic share a common feature. Together they have the capacity to call into question shared understandings of what constitutes the physical, political and psychological boundaries of home. Consensual understanding (social representations) of home, if unexamined, risks retaining primordial, stable, bounded and historically continuous dimensions. The focus of this article, to this end, is the public’s understanding of home. The “un-homing” techniques used by populist leaders are brought into dialogue with how citizens, as dialogical selves, talk about home. The contours of common-sense on belonging are being informed; it is proposed by a third wave of decolonization. Stimulus-led interviews (N = 76) were conducted in England, Germany, Ireland, Scotland and Sweden. Dialogical analysis shows the public use two social representations relating to (i) freedom of movement and (ii) how the world is organized. These social representations decolonize home beyond national/transnational boundaries towards the transglobal. Citizens, irrespective of degree of migration, navigate future (in) securities using intergenerational dialogue. This serves to anchor transglobal migration-mobility to intergenerational continuity and the possibilities of travelling together through life. Public dialogue, when diffracted into a spectrum of positions on home, has the capacity to counter black/white, us/them, xenophobic protectionism within nationalist populism. In conclusion, scientific studies which reveal the depths of public capacity may become centrally important to post-pandemic recovery.
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spelling pubmed-78813092021-02-16 No Obvious Home: the Public’s Dialogical Creation of Home During the Third Wave of Decolonization Mahendran, Kesi English, Anthony Nieland, Sue Hu Arenas Arena of Crisis The global crises we currently face, ecological, refugee-related and dealing with austerity arising out of the Covid-19 pandemic share a common feature. Together they have the capacity to call into question shared understandings of what constitutes the physical, political and psychological boundaries of home. Consensual understanding (social representations) of home, if unexamined, risks retaining primordial, stable, bounded and historically continuous dimensions. The focus of this article, to this end, is the public’s understanding of home. The “un-homing” techniques used by populist leaders are brought into dialogue with how citizens, as dialogical selves, talk about home. The contours of common-sense on belonging are being informed; it is proposed by a third wave of decolonization. Stimulus-led interviews (N = 76) were conducted in England, Germany, Ireland, Scotland and Sweden. Dialogical analysis shows the public use two social representations relating to (i) freedom of movement and (ii) how the world is organized. These social representations decolonize home beyond national/transnational boundaries towards the transglobal. Citizens, irrespective of degree of migration, navigate future (in) securities using intergenerational dialogue. This serves to anchor transglobal migration-mobility to intergenerational continuity and the possibilities of travelling together through life. Public dialogue, when diffracted into a spectrum of positions on home, has the capacity to counter black/white, us/them, xenophobic protectionism within nationalist populism. In conclusion, scientific studies which reveal the depths of public capacity may become centrally important to post-pandemic recovery. Springer International Publishing 2021-02-13 2022 /pmc/articles/PMC7881309/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s42087-020-00176-w Text en © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG part of Springer Nature 2021 This article is made available via the PMC Open Access Subset for unrestricted research re-use and secondary analysis in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for the duration of the World Health Organization (WHO) declaration of COVID-19 as a global pandemic.
spellingShingle Arena of Crisis
Mahendran, Kesi
English, Anthony
Nieland, Sue
No Obvious Home: the Public’s Dialogical Creation of Home During the Third Wave of Decolonization
title No Obvious Home: the Public’s Dialogical Creation of Home During the Third Wave of Decolonization
title_full No Obvious Home: the Public’s Dialogical Creation of Home During the Third Wave of Decolonization
title_fullStr No Obvious Home: the Public’s Dialogical Creation of Home During the Third Wave of Decolonization
title_full_unstemmed No Obvious Home: the Public’s Dialogical Creation of Home During the Third Wave of Decolonization
title_short No Obvious Home: the Public’s Dialogical Creation of Home During the Third Wave of Decolonization
title_sort no obvious home: the public’s dialogical creation of home during the third wave of decolonization
topic Arena of Crisis
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7881309/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s42087-020-00176-w
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