West European Immigration and Immigrant Policy in the New Century
Anthony M. Messina
- 280 pages
- English
- PDF
- Disponible sur iOS et Android
West European Immigration and Immigrant Policy in the New Century
Anthony M. Messina
Ă propos de ce livre
Few, if any phenomena affecting Western Europe as a whole since 1945 have been more far-reaching in their immediate effects or more potentially destabilizing to politics and society over the long term than the accumulative experience of immigration. Messina and his contributors analyze why the major immigrant-receiving states of Western Europe historically permitted and often abetted relatively high levels of postwar migration, and they assess how contemporary governments attempt to govern immigration flows and manage the domestic social and political fallout which it inevitably yields. The central purpose of the volume is to address these questions within the context of the decision-making logics that have demonstratively governed postwar migration to Western Europe in each of its three distinct, but interrelated waves or phases-labor migration, family migration, and humanitarian or forced migration. Messina demonstrates that postwar migration to Western Europe, in all of its phases, has been governed by a set of mutually reinforcing and mostly compatible logics. Of theseâthe economic, the humanitarian, and the politicalâthe political has predominated over time and is likely to continue doing so into the indefinite future. A major cross-disciplinary analysis that will appeal to political scientists, sociologists, and general researchers and scholars of ethnicity, race relations, and comparative public policy.
Foire aux questions
Informations
Table des matiĂšres
- Contents
- Figures and Tables
- Preface
- Introduction
- PART I: THE POLITICS OF STATE IMMIGRATION POLICY
- PART II: THE ECONOMIC, POLITICAL AND SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF IMMIGRANT INCORPORATION
- Conclusion
- References
- Index
- About the Editor and Contributors