Experience of Urban Hospitality: An Ecological Approach to the Migrants’ World

This article was inspired by a collaborative action-research experience undertaken in Brussels by ARCH (Action Research Collective for Hospitality), aimed at further understanding the dynamics of hospitality and improving hospitality towards refugees, based on collaboration with actors of civil soci...

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Main Author: Louise Carlier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2020-08-01
Series:Urban Planning
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/3069
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spelling doaj-7ada38fc3dca4fa9a8c483117db93b402020-11-25T02:47:10ZengCogitatioUrban Planning2183-76352020-08-015324125110.17645/up.v5i3.30691617Experience of Urban Hospitality: An Ecological Approach to the Migrants’ WorldLouise Carlier0Faculty of Economic, Social and Political Sciences and Communication, Université Catholique de Louvain, BelgiumThis article was inspired by a collaborative action-research experience undertaken in Brussels by ARCH (Action Research Collective for Hospitality), aimed at further understanding the dynamics of hospitality and improving hospitality towards refugees, based on collaboration with actors of civil society. In a context of spreading policies of hostility and exclusion in Europe and the lack of arrival infrastructures for undocumented migrants, asylum seekers and refugees, the people tend to occupy public spaces of the city. Consequently, these spaces become the central nodes where civil society organizes the humanitarian aid and practices of hospitality and at the same time are places for interactional tensions and institutional violence. In other words, they become an urban stage where the tension between hospitality and exclusion is played out. Based on this research, our article proposes to take the urban consequences of hostility policies seriously by analyzing the ecology of the migrants’ world in the city. Our aim is to understand their experience of segregation and hospitality in the urban environment—and more specifically in public spaces. Public spaces are indeed the only livable spaces for people for whom no room has been made. However, what constitutes their hospitality for migrants, i.e., their capacity to be inhabited, enters into tension with the constitutive dimensions of urban publicness (like accessibility, visibility, or urbanity). Understanding the experience of hospitality in urban public spaces for those who have no other place to live is seen as a condition as well as a means to enhance their urban inclusion.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/3069cityecologyinclusionhospitalityhostilitymigrationpublic spaceurbanityvisibility
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Louise Carlier
spellingShingle Louise Carlier
Experience of Urban Hospitality: An Ecological Approach to the Migrants’ World
Urban Planning
city
ecology
inclusion
hospitality
hostility
migration
public space
urbanity
visibility
author_facet Louise Carlier
author_sort Louise Carlier
title Experience of Urban Hospitality: An Ecological Approach to the Migrants’ World
title_short Experience of Urban Hospitality: An Ecological Approach to the Migrants’ World
title_full Experience of Urban Hospitality: An Ecological Approach to the Migrants’ World
title_fullStr Experience of Urban Hospitality: An Ecological Approach to the Migrants’ World
title_full_unstemmed Experience of Urban Hospitality: An Ecological Approach to the Migrants’ World
title_sort experience of urban hospitality: an ecological approach to the migrants’ world
publisher Cogitatio
series Urban Planning
issn 2183-7635
publishDate 2020-08-01
description This article was inspired by a collaborative action-research experience undertaken in Brussels by ARCH (Action Research Collective for Hospitality), aimed at further understanding the dynamics of hospitality and improving hospitality towards refugees, based on collaboration with actors of civil society. In a context of spreading policies of hostility and exclusion in Europe and the lack of arrival infrastructures for undocumented migrants, asylum seekers and refugees, the people tend to occupy public spaces of the city. Consequently, these spaces become the central nodes where civil society organizes the humanitarian aid and practices of hospitality and at the same time are places for interactional tensions and institutional violence. In other words, they become an urban stage where the tension between hospitality and exclusion is played out. Based on this research, our article proposes to take the urban consequences of hostility policies seriously by analyzing the ecology of the migrants’ world in the city. Our aim is to understand their experience of segregation and hospitality in the urban environment—and more specifically in public spaces. Public spaces are indeed the only livable spaces for people for whom no room has been made. However, what constitutes their hospitality for migrants, i.e., their capacity to be inhabited, enters into tension with the constitutive dimensions of urban publicness (like accessibility, visibility, or urbanity). Understanding the experience of hospitality in urban public spaces for those who have no other place to live is seen as a condition as well as a means to enhance their urban inclusion.
topic city
ecology
inclusion
hospitality
hostility
migration
public space
urbanity
visibility
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/3069
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