The Hell of the Subcontract: Syrian Refugees in Istanbul’s Clothing Industry
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URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/104270Metadatos
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2025-05-20Referencia bibliográfica
Mahmud, Basem, and Rosa M. Soriano-Miras. 2025. The Hell of the Subcontract: Syrian Refugees in Istanbul’s Clothing Industry. Genealogy 9: 55. https://doi.org/ 10.3390/genealogy9020055
Patrocinador
This paper is based on research funded by the European Union’s Horizon, 2020 research and innovation program, Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions, under Grant 841144 (Project FMGESI) and GI "Problemas Sociales en Andalucía". SEJ 129Resumen
This article investigates the employment conditions of Syrian refugee workers
in the clothing industry in Istanbul, as well as its consequences on their socio-emotional
well-being and life plans. 62 interviews in the form of life stories were conducted with
these workers from workspaces of varying sizes. The research identifies ambiguity, hyperprecarity,
institutional violence, and segregation (refugees mostly work in small workshops)
as the main concepts for understanding these conditions. The dimensions of socioemotional
well-being are dominated by depression and loss of control over life. However,
the personal (self) dimension (proud, optimistic, and staying positive with oneself) remains
high. As a result, migration outside of Turkey emerges as as ongoing hope in the pursuit of
stability and control over the future.