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Pathologies of migrant place-making : the case of Polish migrants to the UK.

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Pathologies of migrant place-making : the case of Polish migrants to the UK. / Gill, Nicholas.
In: Environment and Planning A, Vol. 42, No. 5, 2010, p. 1157-1173.

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Gill N. Pathologies of migrant place-making : the case of Polish migrants to the UK. Environment and Planning A. 2010;42(5):1157-1173. doi: 10.1068/a42219

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Gill, Nicholas. / Pathologies of migrant place-making : the case of Polish migrants to the UK. In: Environment and Planning A. 2010 ; Vol. 42, No. 5. pp. 1157-1173.

Bibtex

@article{3c34b7aa74f64ec6ab2a36ccecb38d5f,
title = "Pathologies of migrant place-making : the case of Polish migrants to the UK.",
abstract = "The author argues that migrant place-making can become counterproductive for migrant communities for a variety of reasons. Existing place-making literature is often optimistic about the ability of places to offer migrants common identities and means of mobilising collectively. The author constructs a four-stage general model of migrant place-making to examine the potential pathologies of migrant organisational strategies at each of these four stages. In order to demonstrate the use of this model, an analysis of post-2004 Polish migration to the UK, drawing upon forty-two semistructured interviews with Polish migrants and domestic service providers, is presented. Although earlier migration displayed a number of the ideal characteristics of positive place-making described in the ideal four-stage model, centring around the Polish Catholic churches of England and Wales, post-2004 migration has introduced a series of problems that illustrate the various pathologies that can occur. The author concludes by calling for (i) a greater appreciation of the role of host organisations in the production of successful and unsuccessful place-making, and (ii) a recognition that place-making as a migrant settlement strategy is deeply fallible at various stages of its development.",
author = "Nicholas Gill",
year = "2010",
doi = "10.1068/a42219",
language = "English",
volume = "42",
pages = "1157--1173",
journal = "Environment and Planning A",
issn = "0308-518X",
publisher = "SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Pathologies of migrant place-making : the case of Polish migrants to the UK.

AU - Gill, Nicholas

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - The author argues that migrant place-making can become counterproductive for migrant communities for a variety of reasons. Existing place-making literature is often optimistic about the ability of places to offer migrants common identities and means of mobilising collectively. The author constructs a four-stage general model of migrant place-making to examine the potential pathologies of migrant organisational strategies at each of these four stages. In order to demonstrate the use of this model, an analysis of post-2004 Polish migration to the UK, drawing upon forty-two semistructured interviews with Polish migrants and domestic service providers, is presented. Although earlier migration displayed a number of the ideal characteristics of positive place-making described in the ideal four-stage model, centring around the Polish Catholic churches of England and Wales, post-2004 migration has introduced a series of problems that illustrate the various pathologies that can occur. The author concludes by calling for (i) a greater appreciation of the role of host organisations in the production of successful and unsuccessful place-making, and (ii) a recognition that place-making as a migrant settlement strategy is deeply fallible at various stages of its development.

AB - The author argues that migrant place-making can become counterproductive for migrant communities for a variety of reasons. Existing place-making literature is often optimistic about the ability of places to offer migrants common identities and means of mobilising collectively. The author constructs a four-stage general model of migrant place-making to examine the potential pathologies of migrant organisational strategies at each of these four stages. In order to demonstrate the use of this model, an analysis of post-2004 Polish migration to the UK, drawing upon forty-two semistructured interviews with Polish migrants and domestic service providers, is presented. Although earlier migration displayed a number of the ideal characteristics of positive place-making described in the ideal four-stage model, centring around the Polish Catholic churches of England and Wales, post-2004 migration has introduced a series of problems that illustrate the various pathologies that can occur. The author concludes by calling for (i) a greater appreciation of the role of host organisations in the production of successful and unsuccessful place-making, and (ii) a recognition that place-making as a migrant settlement strategy is deeply fallible at various stages of its development.

U2 - 10.1068/a42219

DO - 10.1068/a42219

M3 - Journal article

VL - 42

SP - 1157

EP - 1173

JO - Environment and Planning A

JF - Environment and Planning A

SN - 0308-518X

IS - 5

ER -