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Informationen zum Autor Jaro Stacul was awarded his Ph.D. in Social Anthropology from the University of Cambridge. He has been a Lecturer in Anthropology at the University of Wales, Swansea, and currently lectures at Roehampton University, London. Berghahn Books also published his The Bounded Field: Localism and Local Identity in an Italian Alpine Valley (2003). Christina Moutsou received her Ph.D. in Social Anthropology from the University of Cambridge and has been working on Greek-Turkish relations, cosmopolitanism and the European Union. She is Research Associate at the University of Cambridge and a fully qualified psychoanalytic psychotherapist. Currently she is working on the links between anthropology and psychotherapy. Helen Kopnina was awarded her Ph.D. in Social Anthropology from the University of Cambridge. Currently she lectures at the Vrije Universiteit and the Fashion Institute, Hoogeschool, both in Amsterdam. Her postdoctoral research examines small businesses in Singapore and Malaysia. Her publications include the book East to West Migration (Ashgate 2005). Klappentext At the turn of the millennium the state of Europe is fluid and contested, yet how this affects the everyday lives of European peoples and the ways they experience the social world they live in remains largely unexplored. Drawing upon ethnographic information from diverse European settings, this volume points to the contradictions that the project of a "Europe without boundaries" involves. In illustrating how the removal of political boundaries can create other boundaries, the articles in this volume provide alternatives to recent theorising on complexity, which takes little account of human agency. Zusammenfassung At the turn of the millennium the state of Europe is fluid and contested! yet how this affects the everyday lives of European peoples and the ways they experience the social world they live in remains largely unexplored. Drawing upon ethnographic information from diverse European settings! this volume points to the contradictions that the project of a "Europe without boundaries" involves. In illustrating how the removal of political boundaries can create other boundaries! the articles in this volume provide alternatives to recent theorising on complexity! which takes little account of human agency. Inhaltsverzeichnis List of Illustrations Preface and Acknowledgements Chapter 1. Crossing European Boundaries: Beyond Conventional Geographical Categories Jaro Stacul , Christina Moutsou and Helen Kopnina PART I: INSTITUTIONAL CROSSINGS Chapter 2. Crossing Boundaries through Education: European Schools and the Supersession of Nationalism Cris Shore and Daniela Baratieri Chapter 3. Neo-Liberal Nationalism: Ethnic Integration and Estonia's Accession to the European Union Gregory Feldman Chapter 4. The European Left and the New Immigrations: The Case of Italy Davide Però PART II: THE EXPERIENCE OF IMMIGRATION Chapter 5. The Grand Old West: Mythical Narratives of a Better Past before 1989 in Views of West-Berlin Youth from Immigrant Families Sabine Mannitz Chapter 6. Invisible Community: Russians in London and Amsterdam Helen Kopnina Chapter 7. Merging European Boundaries: A Stroll in Brussels Christina Moutsou Chapter 8. Bosnian Women in Mallorca: Migration as a Precarious Balancing Act Jacqueline Waldren PART III: LOCALISING EUROPE Chapter 9. Claiming the Local in the Irish/British Borderlands: Locality, Nation-State and the Disruption of Boundaries William F. Kelleher, Jr. Chapter 10. Bou...