Negotiating Territoriality and Diversity: Young People’s Encounters in Northern Ireland Divided Communities


Autoria(s): Selim, Gehan
Data(s)

01/07/2016

Resumo

Neighborhoods across the globe are becoming increasingly ‘divers’, yet we still find their urban encounters reproduced through negotiating differences that escalates moods of social inequality and spatial imbalances. Research on ethnic division also stresses the spatial aspects of their production as shared urban spaces are mostly signified in the literature as ethnic ‘enclaves’. Territoriality and place attachment, in this sense, has a wide impact on the people’s everyday encounters while experiencing segregation. These historical narratives have produced communities that exhibit high levels of intracommunity relations and localized networking. This article investigates how youngster generations in Northern Ireland perceive, accept and respond to their differences, or perhaps how they act against it, to push the boundaries towards more diversity. In fact, the spatial and temporal encounters that occur among one community and the ‘Other’ signify a sort of negotiations and being more constructive about the future. The argument maintains that territoriality and place attachment has a wide impact on the young people’s everyday experiences. The empirical study shows how individuals and community groups position and identify themselves under the impact of social segregation. Building on social identity theories, I explain how people in Derry have established their own sense of belonging, of who they are, based on their group memberships which eventually became an important source of pride and self-esteem.

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/negotiating-territoriality-and-diversity-young-peoples-encounters-in-northern-ireland-divided-communities(8593d7c8-e46d-48c5-906b-0ee1b71bb3f7).html

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess

Fonte

Selim , G 2016 , ' Negotiating Territoriality and Diversity: Young People’s Encounters in Northern Ireland Divided Communities ' Geoforum .

Tipo

article