ETHNIC MINORITIES AND INTER-ETHNIC RELATIONS IN CONTEXT
Ethnic Minorities and Inter-Ethnic Relations in Context
A Dutch Hungarian comparison
Edited by
KAREN PHALET and ANTAL RKNY
European Research Centre on Migration and Ethnic Relations:
Utrecht University, the Netherlands and Etvs Lornd University, Hungary
First published 2001 by Ashgate Publishing
Reissued 2018 by Routledge
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Copyright Karen Phalet and Antal rkny 2001
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A Library of Congress record exists under LC control number: 2001095425
ISBN 13: 978-1-138-70155-7 (hbk)
ISBN 13: 978-1-315-20999-9 (ebk)
Contents
List of Contributors
Karen Phalet & Antal rkny
SECTION EDITOR: LOUK HAGENDOORN
Louk Hagendoorn
Peer Scheepers, Genevive Verberk & Marcel Coenders
Gyrgy Csepeli, Zoltn Fbin & Endre Sik
Maykel Verkuyten
Henk Dekker
Antal rkny & Ildik Szab
SECTION EDITOR: GYRGY CSEPELI
Andrs Kovcs
Ruben Konig, Peer Scheepers & Albert Felling
Zsolt Enyedi, Ferenc Ers & Zoltn Fbin
Maria Szkelyi, Gyrgy Csepeli & Antal rkny
SECTION EDITOR: ANTAL RKNY
Justus Veenman
Pter Rad
Jnos Ladnyi
Sako Musterd
SECTION EDITOR: HERMAN VAN DER WUSTEN
Herman van der Wusten
Han Entzinger
Gbor Kardos
Gijs van Oenen
Marcel Coenders is lecturer in social research methodology at the Free University, Amsterdam. His research focuses on prejudice, exclusion of ethnic minorities, and survey methodology. He recently completed his dissertation Nationalism and Ethnic Exclusionism in a Comparative Perspective (2001) in the Department of Sociology, University of Nijmegen, the Netherlands.
Gyrgy Csepeli is professor in the Departments of Social Psychology (1986-) and Cultural Anthropology (temporarily) Etvs Lornd University, Budapest. He has held visiting professorships in the Departments of Sociology at Yale University (2000) and the New School for Social Research (19997); and in the Departments of Political Science at the University of Michigan (19941995) and Oregon State University (1991), where he was Dubach Distinguished Professor. He is on the Editorial Board of the Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, Szociologiai szemle, and Jel-Kep. His publications include: (co-edited with R. Famen, L. Hagendoom and H. Dekker) European Nations and Nationalism. Theoretical and historical perspectives (Ashgate, 2000); (co-authored with A. rkny and M. Szkelyi) Grappling with National Identity. How nations see each other in Central Europe (Akadmiai Kiad, 2000); and (co-authored with A. rkny) Ideology and Political Beliefs in Hungary. The Twilight of State Socialism (Pinter, 1992).
Henk Dekker occupies the endowed chair for the social scientific study of German-Dutch relations, Utrecht University. He lecturers at University College, Utrecht and is associate professor at Leiden University (both in political science). He is vice-chair of the IPSA Research Committee on Political Socialization and Political Education. His research focus is on explanations for national and international political orientations and behaviours, including national identities and nationalism, national stereotypes, voting behaviour, and political socialisation. Recent publications include: contributions to and co-editing of Duitsland in Beeld (Swets & Zeitlinger, 1997); Deutschland und die Niederlande; ein besonderes Verhltnis (Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft, 1999); Democracies in Transition: Political Culture and Socialization Transformed in West and East (BIS, 2000); and European Nations and Nationalism: Theoretical and Historical Perspectives (Ashgate, 2000).
Zsolt Enyedi is assistant professor at the Political Science Department of the Central European University, Budapest. His research interests include party politics, pillarisation, religion and politics, and authoritarianism.
Ferenc Ers is deputy director and head of the Department for Social and Cultural Psychology of the Research Institute for Psychology of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, and professor of social psychology at the University of Pcs, where he teaches undergraduate and doctoral courses. His research areas include: authoritarianism, prejudice and discrimination; minority identity and coping with threatened and traumatised identities; the relationship between psychoanalysis and social psychology. He has published and edited several books. His recent publications include (co-edited with Z. Enyedi) Authoritarianism and prejudice. Central European perspectives (Osiris, Budapest, 1999); in Hungarian: The Labyrinths of Identity. Narrative Constructions and Identity Strategies (Janus-Osiris, Budapest, 2001) and Psychoanalytical Social Psychology. Historical and theoretical studies (j Mandtum, Budapest, 2001).
Han Entzinger is professor of Migration and Integration Studies at Erasmus University Rotterdam. Before which, he was professor of General Social Sciences at Utrecht University and director of the European Research Centre on Migration and Ethnic Relations (ERCOMER). He has advised the Dutch government on policies for immigrant integration. He is also the President of the Research Committee on Migration (RC 31) of the International Sociological Association.
Zoltn Fbin is sociologist concerned with research are authoritarianism, ethnic attitudes and social stratification. He is the director of the databank of the Social Research Informatics Center (TRKI), Budapest.
Albert Felling is professor of methodology and a member the Royal Academy of Arts and Sciences. His Research interests include the broad field of empirical sociology and political sciences; in particular social network analysis and policy analysis.
Louk Hagendoorn is professor of social sciences at Utrecht University and academic director of the European Research Centre on Migration and Ethnic Relations (ERCOMER). His interests are in the field of inter-group relations, cross-cultural and political psychology. He publishes on inter-group stereotypes, ethnic conflict and nationalism. He is currently involved in research on racism in the Netherlands and comparative research on ethnic relations in Central Europe, former Soviet countries, and the Russian Federation. His recent publications include (co-authored with S. Tumanov and H. Linssen)