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This book offers ground-breaking insights on how the dynamics of conditional inclusion and "good" citizenship play out today, with a focus on migrant and immigrant-origin minorities in Europe and the Americas. The book shows that conditional inclusion is a globally widespread tool for controlling and rank-ordering minorities.
Sommario
1. Introduction-Good immigrants, permitted outsiders: conditional inclusion and citizenship in comparison 2. Claiming membership: boundaries, positionality, US citizenship, and what it means to be American 3. Cultivated intuition: reframing migrant responses to the "Public Charge" policy 4. "Muslims are finally waking up": post-9/11 American immigrant youth challenge conditional citizenship 5. Citizens-in-waiting: strategic naturalization delays in the USA and UAE 6. Being Muslim 'without a fuss': relaxed religiosity and conditional inclusion in Danish schools and society 7. New models of the "good refugee" - bureaucratic expectations of Syrian refugees in Germany 8. Intergenerational narratives of citizenship among EU citizens in the UK after the Brexit referendum 9. Labouring for inclusion: debating immigrant contributions to Chile 10. The transnational continuum of conditional inclusion: from marginalised immigrants to rejected returnees
Info autore
Andreas Hackl is a political and economic anthropologist at the School of Social and Political Science at the University of Edinburgh, UK. His research focuses on inequality, migration, forced displacement, and the internet economy. He is the author of
The Invisible Palestinians: The Hidden Struggle for Inclusion in Jewish Tel Aviv.
Riassunto
This book offers ground-breaking insights on how the dynamics of conditional inclusion and “good” citizenship play out today, with a focus on migrant and immigrant-origin minorities in Europe and the Americas. The book shows that conditional inclusion is a globally widespread tool for controlling and rank-ordering minorities.