英国退欧
公民投票
解释现象学分析
欧洲联盟
身份(音乐)
感觉
文化适应
社会心理学
人口
心理学
移民
背景(考古学)
社会学
性别研究
定性研究
政治学
政治
社会科学
美学
法学
地理
业务
经济政策
哲学
人口学
考古
作者
Kate Foxwell,Sarah Strohmaier,Fergal W. Jones,Dennis Nigbur
摘要
Abstract Migrants' subjective sense of home deserves further research attention. In the particular context of the United Kingdom's (UK's) decision to leave the European Union (‘Brexit’), we interviewed 10 European citizens living in the UK about their sense of home, using interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA). In our analysis, we identified themes of (1) having more than one home, (2) making and finding a new home, (3) being permanently different from the non‐migrant population and (4) a concern about feeling safe and welcome. Migration and sense of home involved building and rebuilding personal and social identity. Making a new home was effortful, and neither the old home nor the difference from the native population ever disappeared psychologically. This adds an experiential aspect to the idea of ‘integration’ in acculturation. Different notions of home were linked to different experiences of the impact of the Brexit referendum. We discuss the connections between acculturation, sense of home and lived experience and propose lived identity as a fruitful subject matter for social psychology.
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