Syrian researcher Basem Mahmud, a sociology professor at the University of Granada in Spain, in 2022 published a book titled Emotions and Belonging in Forced Migration: Syrian Refugees and Asylum Seekers.
Here, he takes a new sociological approach, wherein he explores the breadth of feelings experienced by refugees and forced migrants, particularly Syrian refugees. He explores the relationship between these emotions and their impact on the host society.
Mahmud's research seeks to address how emotions (and the search for a sense of belonging) play into the lives of those undergoing forced migration due to war, dictatorship, or both.
The book's first chapter sets the scene for the following four chapters, by presenting three primary approaches to studying forced migrants, which span their daily lives, therapeutic aspects related to post-traumatic stress disorders, and private events concerning each refugee.
Fleeting hope
In the second chapter, Disturbed Hope, Mahmud analyses psychological and psychiatric perspectives on the idea of hope as a positive motivational state, describing it as an emotion, and finally as a fundamental force in life.
He then distinguishes between the culture of dignity and the culture of honour.
He also includes testimonies from many refugees and forced migrants about their emotions, feelings, and hopes in building a life for themselves during their first years in a new host country.
The researcher believes that a forced migrant does not cross borders seeking migration per se, but rather because the individual is no longer able to build a home where they are from.