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Welcome City: Refugees in Three German Cities

Author

Listed:
  • Hans Joachim Neis

    (Portland Urban Architecture Research Laboratory (PUARL), University of Oregon, USA)

  • Briana Meier

    (Portland Urban Architecture Research Laboratory (PUARL), University of Oregon, USA)

  • Tomoki Furukawazono

    (Portland Urban Architecture Research Laboratory (PUARL), University of Oregon, USA)

Abstract

Since late 2015, the authors have studied the refugee crisis in Europe. In this article, we analyze local factors that are significant for urban planning to include in an integration plan through case studies in three cities in Germany. We have chosen to study Germany because of the country’s touted Willkommen Kultur (welcome culture), which was prompted in large part by Chancellor Angela Merkel’s “Flüchtlinge Willkommen” (“refugees welcome”) stance. Now, three years after Chancellor Merkel’s declaration to the world, although international and national policies set many parameters for refugee integration, responses to the uncertainty of the situation are fundamentally informed by local contexts. Germany has adopted a policy of distributing refugees to communities throughout the country according to the so-called “Königstein Key”, which sets quotas for each state according to economic capacity. We have selected case study cities and a county that are at different scales and regions: Borken in Hessen (13,500 people), Kassel County (200,000), and Essen, a larger city (600,000). Here we investigate the ways in which German citizens and refugees interact and integrate, with a focus on the social-spatial aspects of refugee experiences and the impacts on urban planning policy, urban morphology, building typology, and pattern language formation. Beyond crisis, we are looking at how refugees can and will try to integrate into their host countries, cities, and neighborhoods and start a new life and how host communities respond to refugee arrival. Urban architecture projects for housing and work opportunities that help the process of integration are part of this study. Particularly, in this article, we investigate the reality on the ground of the positive Willkommen Kultur and the high expectations and implied promises that were set in 2015 by Chancellor Angela Merkel and German society.

Suggested Citation

  • Hans Joachim Neis & Briana Meier & Tomoki Furukawazono, 2018. "Welcome City: Refugees in Three German Cities," Urban Planning, Cogitatio Press, vol. 3(4), pages 101-115.
  • Handle: RePEc:cog:urbpla:v:3:y:2018:i:4:p:101-115
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    Citations

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    Cited by:

    1. Homayun Alam, 2020. "Political Borders Are Not Natural Orders – The COVID-19 Pandemic in Frankfurt on the Main and Its Refugees," European Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies Articles, European Center for Science Education and Research, May - Aug.
    2. Frank Eckardt, 2018. "European Cities Planning for Asylum," Urban Planning, Cogitatio Press, vol. 3(4), pages 61-63.
    3. Hillmann, Felicitas & Toğral Koca, Burcu, 2021. "“By women, for women, and with women”: on the integration of highly qualified female refugees into the labour Markets of Berlin and Brandenburg," EconStor Open Access Articles and Book Chapters, ZBW - Leibniz Information Centre for Economics, vol. 9.

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