“I Will Return Strong”: The Role of Life Aspirations in Refugees’ Return Aspirations

Author:

Müller-Funk Lea1,Fransen Sonja2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sociology, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands

2. UNU-MERIT, Maastricht University, The Netherlands

Abstract

This article studies how return migration aspirations are formed and realized in the context of protracted displacement. Drawing on a mixed-methods study that included survey research and in-depth interviews in Turkey, Lebanon, and Syria conducted, we study whether respondents aspired to return (i) currently, with the conflict still ongoing; and (ii) in the future, if the war were to end. Our analyses reveal how broader life aspirations play a crucial role in shaping return aspirations, and how current and future return aspirations are separate concepts. Current return aspirations were strongly stratified. For economically vulnerable respondents, current return considerations were often related to survival, whereas for respondents from the educated middle class, current return aspirations were part of their broader life aspirations. Aspirations to return after the war's end were largely driven by a wish to realize broader life goals. Future return aspirations often functioned as a mental coping strategy to keep hope for change in the future — including political change — alive. Return abilities favored those with higher socioeconomic status, those who had remained neutral in the conflict and those willing to take high risks. Overall, our analyses illustrate the usefulness of the aspirations-abilities framework, and the important role of life aspirations, in understanding return-migration decisions in a context of protracted displacement.

Funder

EU’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under Marie Skłodowska-Curie Grant

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Demography

Reference59 articles.

1. Al Husein N., Wagner N. 2020. “Determinants of Intended Return Migration among Refugees: A Comparison of Syrian Refugees in Germany.” 650. International Institute of Social Studies Working Paper Series.

2. Educational Assessment of Syrian Refugees in Turkey

3. Linking Migration Aspirations to Integration Prospects: The Experience of Syrian Refugees in Sweden

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