I Grænselandet
Udgivelsens forfattere:
Socialområdet
Socialområdet
The PhD thesis is an ethnography of the encounter between Danish welfare state officials and refugee parents of Palestinian descent with sons involved in crime and violence in the largest so-called "migrant ghetto" in Denmark, Gellerupparken. The analytical concern of the thesis is to understand how marginality is enacted at the interface between the Danish welfare state, Palestinian families, and the Palestinian community in Gellerupparken. Empirically, the thesis explores how a group of parents experience and navigate welfare state interventions into their private family lifeworld when their children engage in crime, violence, or become embroiled in local conflicts with the police and institutional staff. A main concern for the parents is to minimize the damage that these conflicts cause to their sons and the family, while at the same time seeking to "keep the family together". The latter entails a complicated set of creative practices and moral struggles as the parents are trapped between the practices of the state, the Palestinian moral and social community, and their own sons. The analysis is based on 13 months of ethnographic fieldwork in Gellerupparken, where I lived in the homes of a few selected families and followed their lives at home, at meetings with welfare state representatives working with their children, at prisons visiting their young sons, at social gatherings in the community, and on a journey to visit families members in Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon. The thesis offers an intimate insight into the troubling effects of the state, and provides a new perspective on the local working of welfare state representatives as seen from the margin of the Danish society.
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Aarhus Universitetsforlag