“We Feel Like We’re Home”: The Resettlement and Integration of Syrian Refugees in Smaller and Rural Canadian Communities

Authors

  • Stacey Haugen University of Alberta

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7202/1064819ar

Keywords:

Syrian refugees, Canada, refugee sponsorship, private sponsorship, resettlement, rural Canada, social capital

Abstract

Abstract
Despite the media attention to Syrian refugee families being welcomed, finding work, and feeling at home in small towns across Canada, little is known about resettlement and integration in smaller and rural communities. Addressing this knowledge gap, this study visited four rural communities across four provinces in an effort to highlight the experiences of smaller and rural communities and the refugees living there. Based on interviews and conversations with rural refugee sponsors and community members, Syrian refugees, and service providers, the findings tell a story of refugees being welcomed into rural and smaller communities and of communities coming together to support the newcomers and find solutions to rural challenges. The article concludes that rural places can have a lot to offer refugees, some of whom settle permanently in these areas, and their experiences should be included as part of the larger narrative of refugee resettlement in Canada.

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Author Biography

Stacey Haugen, University of Alberta

Stacey Haugen is a PhD student at the University of Alberta. She was a Research Award recipient at the International Development Research Centre in 2017 and can be contacted at shaugen@ualberta.ca.

Published

2019-06-05

How to Cite

Haugen, S. (2019). “We Feel Like We’re Home”: The Resettlement and Integration of Syrian Refugees in Smaller and Rural Canadian Communities. Refuge: Canada’s Journal on Refugees, 35(2), 54–64. https://doi.org/10.7202/1064819ar

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