Living the weathers and other stories

Have you ever considered what role the weather plays in the processes of integration, or how the word ârefugeeâ shapes daily lives of the people it marks?
How about what kind of places matter most for someone who was forced to make a home in a new country?
Our new researchâ¯Living the weathers and other storiesâ¯explores these questions among people who live in Yorkshire and Humber and who were granted refugee protection at some point in their life in the UK.â¯
The emotional side of integration
Where do people feel emotionally at ease and what makes them feel that way? We suggest that when looking at the emotional aspect of integration, we need to take into account the experiences, practices and connections people have in other places and in other times, that go beyond the âhereâ [UK context] and ânowâ [present day].
This enables us to consider individualsâ past lives, present connections, and aspirations more attentively - their relationships, skills, knowledge, education, hopes for a good life - and to explore how these relate to living in the UK and integration processes.
Whatâs the weather got to do with it?
Find out how the weather shapes living in the UK, both in a very mundane practical way of what can and cannot be done; and emotionally through evoking connections and links to diverse places and times.
The impact of the labelling someone a ârefugeeâ
Get more insight into how âbeing a refugeeâ impacts everyday practices, opportunities, engagements, self-esteem and sense of belonging and how it can make people feel stuck, unable to resume their life.
Helpful places
Read about how some specific places, such as libraries, community hubs, marketplaces or religious centres proved to be significant for day-to-day life in a new country, making mundane activities both hopeful and more positive.
Download your copy from the link below.
Background to the report
Produced by: Migration Yorkshire as part of theâ¯Refugee Integration Yorkshire and Humberâ¯project.â¯