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Article Dans Une Revue Ethnic and Racial Studies Année : 2011

Living the multicultural city: acceptance, belonging and young identities in the city of Leicester, England

John Clayton
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Résumé

Drawing upon research conducted with young people in the city of Leicester, England, this paper explores what it means for those from black and minority ethnic backgrounds, particularly more recent arrivals, to live within and adapt to specific multicultural urban contexts. After introducing prevailing racisms and accommodations, the paper examines how forms of belonging are expressed, re-produced and negotiated through the spatial trajectories of everyday life. This includes the value of emerging versions of place through community, religious practice as a form of social capital, the importance of routine, and the construction of multifaceted identities. Such experiences relate to contingent hierarchies of acceptance and legitimacy, histories of settlement, economic marginalisation, as well as gendered and generational roles. These young people negotiate everyday life and belonging by retaining, extending and forging local and trans-national ties; highlighting the relationship between socio-spatial positions, everyday practice and identity formation.
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Dates et versions

hal-00730235 , version 1 (08-09-2012)

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John Clayton. Living the multicultural city: acceptance, belonging and young identities in the city of Leicester, England. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 2011, PP (PP), pp.1. ⟨10.1080/01419870.2011.605457⟩. ⟨hal-00730235⟩

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