Identity and Integration
Migrants in Western Europe
Edited by
ROSEMARIE SACKMANN
University of Bremen, Germany
BERNHARD PETERS
University of Bremen, Germany
THOMAS FAIST
University of Applied Sciences, Bremen, Germany
First published 2003 by Ashgate Publishing
Published 2016 by Routledge
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Copyright Rosemarie Sackmann, Bernhard Peters and Thomas Faist 2003
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British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
Identity and integration : migrants in Western Europe. - (Research in migration and ethnic relations series)
1.Immigrants - Cultural assimilation - Europe, Western 2.Group identity - Europe, Western 3.Transnationalism 4.Social integration - Europe, Western 5.Europe, Western - Emigration and immigration
I.Sackmann, Rosemarie II.Peters, Bernhard III.Faist, Thomas, 1959-
305.90691
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Identity and integration : migrants in Western Europe / edited by Rosemarie Sackmann, Bernhard Peters, and Thomas Faist.
p. cm. -- (Research in migration and ethnic relations series)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. Immigrants--Cultural assimilation--Europe, Western. 2. Group identity--Europe, Western. 3. Social integration--Europe, Western. I. Sackmann, Rosemarie. II. Peters, Bernhard, 1949- III. Faist, Thomas, 1959- IV. Series.
JV7590.I34 2003
304.8'4--dc21
2003048165
ISBN 13: 978-0-7546-3211-5 (hbk)
Contents
Rosemarie Sackmann
Bernhard Peters
Rainer Baubck
Godfried Engbersen
Tariq Modood
Ursula Apitzsch
Yasemin Karakaolu
Thijl Sunier
Margret Spohn
Kathrin Prmm, Rosemarie Sackmann, Tanjev Schultz
Sven Sauter
Riva Kastoryano
Thomas Faist
Rosemarie Sackmann
Ursula Apitzsch is Professor of Sociology and Political Science and Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences at the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University (Frankfurt am Main). She published widely in the fields of migration, culture, ethnicity and biographical analysis. She coordinates an EC sponsored European project (EthnoGeneration) on women as entrepreneurs and the chances of the second generation in migrant business. In 1999 she edited a book on migration and tradition building (Migration und Traditionsbildung, Westdeutscher Verlag, Wiesbaden).
Rainer Baubck (D. Phil, Senior Lecturer), sociologist and political scientist, member of the Research Unit for Institutional Change and European Integration of the Austrian Academy of Sciences. He teaches at the Universities of Vienna and Innsbruck. He has been visiting fellow and guest professor at the universities of Warwick (UK), Princeton (USA), Malm (Schweden), Bristol (UK). He has published widely on migration, multiculturalism, nationalism, citizenship, and political theory.
Godfried Engbersen is Professor of Sociology at the Erasmus University of Rotterdam, the Netherlands. He studied sociology at the University of Leiden and worked at the Universities of Leiden, Utrecht and Amsterdam. He is the author of numerous books, including (with Romke van der Veen) Moderne armoede (Modern Poverty, 1987); Cultures of Unemployment (Westview Press, 1993) (with Jack Burgers) De Ongekende Stad I en II (The Unkown City I and II, 1999). Since 1997 he has been the editor of the Annual Dutch Report on Poverty and Social Exclusion (Amsterdam University Press).
Thomas Faist is Professor of Political Science and Director of International Studies in Political Management (ISPM) at the University of Applied Sciences Bremen. He received his PhD from The Graduate Faculty, New School for Social Research in New York. His research interests focus on transnational and social policy. His latest books include The Volume and Dynamics of International Migration and Transnational Spaces (Oxford University Press, 2000) and Transstate Spaces (Ashgate, forthcoming). Currently, he is engaged in a comparative research project on the politics of dual citizenship in Europe.
Yasemin Karakaolu (D. Phil.) is Assistant Professor at the University of Essen (Germany). She studied Turkology, Political Sciences and Modern German Literature in Hamburg and Ankara. She received her PhD from the University of Essen. Her main fields of interest are Islam in Germany, second generation Turkish migrants and migrant children in the German education system.
Riva Kastoryano (Dr.) is a senior research fellow at the CNRS (National Centre for Scientific Research) and teaches at the Institute for Political Studies in Paris. Her work focuses on relationships between identity and states, on minority and community formation in western democratic societies. Her publications include Negotiating Identities. States and Immigrants in France and Germany (Princeton University Press, forthcoming). She is the editor of Quelle identit pour lEurope? Le multiculturalisme lpreuve (Paris, Presses de Sciences-Po, 1998).
Tariq Modood is Professor of Sociology and Public Policy and Director of the Centre for the Study of Ethnicity and Citizenship at the University of Bristol, UK. His publications include (co-author) Ethnic Minorities in Britain: Diversity and Disadvantages (PSI, 1997), (joint ed.) Debating Cultural Hybridity (Zed Books, 1997) and (joint ed.) The Politics of Multiculturalism in the New Europe (Zed Books, 1997). His most recent publication is The Place of Muslims in British Secular Multiculturalism in N. Alsayyad and M. Castells (eds), Muslim Europe or Euro-Islam: Politics, Culture and Citizenship in the Age of Globalisation, New York (Lexington Books, 2002).
Bernhard Peters is Professor of Political Theory at the University of Bremen and Co-director of the Institute for Intercultural and International Studies (InIIS). He received his Ph. D. (1991) and his Habilitation in sociology (1993) at the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University in Frankfurt. He has published books and articles on topics in the field of social theory. His current research interests concern aspects of cultural differentiation in contemporary societies, public culture and public discourse, and relations between normative and empirical theory.