Date: 2019
Type: Book
Migrant integration in a changing Europe : immigrants, European citizens, and co-ethnics in Italy and Spain
Notre Dame : University of Notre Dame Press, 2019, Helen Kellogg Institute series on democracy and development ; Kellogg Institute series on democracy and development
BARBULESCU, Roxana, Migrant integration in a changing Europe : immigrants, European citizens, and co-ethnics in Italy and Spain, Notre Dame : University of Notre Dame Press, 2019, Helen Kellogg Institute series on democracy and development ; Kellogg Institute series on democracy and development
- https://hdl.handle.net/1814/61966
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
"In this rich study, Roxana Barbulescu examines the transformation of state-led immigrant integration in two relatively new immigration countries in Western Europe: Italy and Spain. The book is comparative in approach and seeks to explain states' immigrant integration strategies across national, regional, and city-level decision and policy making. Barbulescu argues that states pursue no one-size-fits-all strategy for the integration of migrants, but rather simultaneously pursue multiple strategies that vary greatly for different groups. Two main integration strategies stand out. The first one targets non-European citizens and is assimilationist in character and based on interventionist principles according to which the government actively pursues the inclusion of migrants. The second strategy targets EU citizens and is a laissez-faire scenario where foreigners enjoy rights and live their entire lives in the host country without the state or the local authorities seeking their integration"
Table of Contents:
-- List of Tables and Figures
-- Acknowledgments
-- Introduction
1. Migrant integration and the state
2. Migration in Italy and Spain and integration outcomes
3. Varieties of denizenship: rights regimes and the importance of (not) being an EU citizen
4. Interventionist states and the making of integration duties: when, how, and for whom do states pursue integration?
Conclusion. the freedom to not integrate: multicultural integration amid rising neoassimilation.
-- Appendix. Primary Sources
-- Notes
-- References
-- Index
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/61966
ISBN: 9780268104375; 9780268104399; 9780268104405
Publisher: University of Notre Dame Press
Initial version: http://hdl.handle.net/1814/28027
Version: Published version of EUI PhD thesis, 2013
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