Displaced Women: Stitching Through Transitional Period Beyond Liminality
Date
2024-07-12
Authors
Bazara, Abrar
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Abstract
Women during and post-displacement are the most vulnerable to violence and at risk of
their livelihood. It has become common for individuals and communities to experience
more than one displacement in their lifespan, which affects them socially, economically,
and mentally. This calls for a serious re-evaluation of how architects design camps during
the pivotal phase of displacement, the transitional period. How can camp design bring a
sense of belongingness and increase resiliency to overcome liminality during transitional
period?
This thesis re-imagines the existing camp hosting the Syrian community displaced
in Türkiye as an opportunity to rehabilitate women in displacement, to enable them to
look beyond the liminality and remerge into society. This is achieved by using traditional
handicraft as a tool and by weaving a new camp typology to navigate the sociocultural,
psychological, and economical challenges, for the betterment of the camp life during the
transitional period.
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Keywords
Displaced Women, Liminality, Architecture, Syrian Community, Türkiye, Transitional Period