L’hébergement citoyen des exilé·es, une zone grise, informalité et territoires solidaires, le cas de la vallée de la Drôme et de la métropole lyonnaise

The mobilisation for asylum seeker’s accommodation has developed strongly in recent years, in the form of shared flats, housing lending, or squats. In the context of a very restrictive asylum policy on the part of the State, these informal accommodation practices are generally situated on the bangs...

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Autor principal: Élise Roche
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
FR
Publicado: Université des Sciences et Technologies de Lille 2021
Materias:
G
Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/08b39e2d5ae147b5a8be356b8ad98f02
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Sumario:The mobilisation for asylum seeker’s accommodation has developed strongly in recent years, in the form of shared flats, housing lending, or squats. In the context of a very restrictive asylum policy on the part of the State, these informal accommodation practices are generally situated on the bangs of the “DNA” (National Reception System) designed to accommodate asylum seekers during their asylum application. The notion of "grey zone" (Yftachel) is a useful way to understand the ambiguity of these practices: informal, they are nonetheless shaped by the administrative procedures – even though they don’t want to. This article shows what is at stake in this "grey zone" of citizen accommodation, in Drôme valley and Lyon metropolis : on the one hand, it discusses how the National Reception System contributes to the creation of dissuasive spaces for the asylum seeker’s ; on the other hand, it analyses how so-called "citizen" accommodation is based on informal practices, but in interaction with the frameworks emanating from migration policies. Finally, the article shows how these practices of solidarity accommodation are also creative, in that they contribute to questioning in depth collective practices and representations, which go beyond the strict framework of the modalities of this accommodation.