3.8 Article

Social integration through social connection in everyday life. Residents' experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic in SallBo collaborative housing, Sweden

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/ARCH-10-2020-0236

Keywords

Collaborative housing; Social connection; Social integration; Spatial dimension; COVID-19; Everyday life

Categories

Funding

  1. Swedish National Board of Housing, Building and Planning (Boverket)
  2. Lund University

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This article focuses on the daily life experiences of elderly individuals, young locals, and refugees living together in a collaborative housing project in Sweden, both before and during the COVID-19 pandemic. The spatial dimension plays a crucial role in the conceptualization of social integration, as highlighted in the study's qualitative case study methodology. The findings suggest that the social connections formed in common spaces of the collaborative housing project have facilitated processes of social integration despite the challenges posed by the pandemic.
Purpose - The aim of this article is to explore the everyday life experiences of elderly (+70 years) living with young locals and refugees in a collaborative housing project before and during the COVID-19 pandemic in Sweden. The paper discusses the importance of the spatial dimension in the conceptualization of social integration. Design/methodology/approach - The main method is a qualitative case study based on observations of settings, document/video analysis, online diary entries made by ten residents and eight semi-structured interviews conducted with the residents. Findings - SallBo was conceived as a new type of collaborative housing in which elderly, young locals and refugees share common spaces with the aim of enabling social integration. In this context, COVID-19 interrupted the ongoing processes of living together after four months of moving to the house. The three main themes that emerge from the empirical material are (1) changes in the use of common spaces and social interactions, (2) residents' resilient coping responses during the pandemic and (3) insights for future design of collaborative housing based on their experience. The pandemic caused a moment of institutional vacuum, which triggered the agency of the residents whilst developing social bonds and social bridges among them. Social implications - Social connection created in everyday life at SallBo's common spaces has triggered processes of social integration. Originality/value - The ongoing processes of social integration have included the spatial dimension. We understand social integration as a process that involves people from different generations and ethnical backgrounds, which takes place in common spaces and everyday life as different modes of socialization.

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