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|a Hinger, Sophie.
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|a Politics Of (Dis)Integration.
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|a 1st ed.
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|a Cham :
|b Springer International Publishing AG,
|c 2019.
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|c ©2020.
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|a 1 online resource (224 pages)
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|a text
|b txt
|2 rdacontent
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|a computer
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|a online resource
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|a IMISCOE Research Series
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|a Politics of (Dis)Integration -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- Contributors -- Chapter 1: Politics of (Dis)Integration - An Introduction -- 1.1 Situating (Dis)Integration in the Existing Literature -- 1.2 The Three Central Contributions of this Volume -- 1.2.1 The Limited Capacity Argument -- 1.2.2 Acts of Integration and Solidarity -- 1.2.3 The (Dis)Integration of Certain Groups or Individuals Is Linked to that of Society as a Whole -- 1.3 (Dis)Integration across Scales and Contexts: The Chapters in this Volume -- References -- Chapter 2: Integration Through Disintegration? The Distinction Between Deserving and Undeserving Refugees in National and Local Integration Policies in Germany -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Integration Policies, Disintegration and Category Analysis -- 2.3 Methodology -- 2.4 The National Integration Bill -- 2.4.1 'We' and the 'Others': An Ethno-National Framing of Integration -- 2.4.2 Differentiating Between 'Genuine' and 'Bogus' Refugees -- 2.4.3 'Promoting and Demanding' the Integration of Entrepreneurial Subjects -- 2.5 A Different Narrative? Local Integration Policies and Practices -- 2.5.1 Refugees as Part of a Heterogeneous Urban Society -- 2.5.2 We All Need to Integrate: Integration as a Two-Way Process -- 2.5.3 The Distinction Between 'Our' and Other Refugees -- 2.6 Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 3: Integration as an Essentially Contested Concept: Questioning the Assumptions behind the National Roma Integration Strategies of Italy and Spain -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 (Roma) Integration as a Stratified Process -- 3.3 Roma Integration Regimes: European Narratives and Fragmented Collectivities -- 3.4 The 'Subjectivisation' of Roma Integration: Political Contexts and Actors -- 3.5 Whose Integration? -- 3.6 Concluding Remarks: (Dis)Integration Dynamics within Integration Policy Frameworks -- 3.7 List of Interviews.
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|a References -- Chapter 4: Can Integration Be Temporary? The (Dis)Integration of Temporary Migrant Workers in Canada and the UK -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Research Design and Case Selection -- 4.3 Temporary Migration Policies and Integration: Rights and Numbers Within Temporality -- 4.4 Migrant Rights and Temporary Integration: Conceptions of Integration for TMWs in Canada and the UK -- 4.4.1 The Case of Canada -- 4.4.2 The Case of the UK -- 4.5 The Disruption of Integration Via Temporariness and Processes of (Dis)Integration in Canada and the UK -- References -- Chapter 5: From Everyday Racist Incidents at Work to Institutional Racism: Migrant and Minority-Ethnic Workers' Experiences in Older-Age Care -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Methodology -- 5.3 Racialisation, Institutional Racism and Anti- discrimination Policies -- 5.4 Everyday Racism at Work Embedded in Power Relationships -- 5.4.1 Racist Attitudes Amongst Colleagues: Abusive Work Environments -- 5.4.2 Discrimination and Harassment by Managers and Employers -- 5.5 Challenging Racist Practices Collectively -- 5.6 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 6: Returning for (Dis)Integration in the Labour Market? The Careers of Labour Migrants Returning to Poland from the United Kingdom -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Migration and Return Migration - The Case of Poland and the UK -- 6.3 Return Migrants' (Dis)Integration, the Role of the State and the Conceptual Framework -- 6.4 Integration, Inclusion and Exclusion and Their Limitations -- 6.5 Research Design and Methodology -- 6.6 Returning Migrants' Labour Market Transitions Shaped by the Politics of (Dis)Integration -- 6.6.1 The Effortless Transition -- 6.6.2 The Unforseen Transition -- 6.6.3 The Failed Transition -- 6.6.4 The Postponed Transition -- 6.7 Conclusions -- Annex 1: Interviewees' Characteristics -- References.
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|a Chapter 7: How Inclusive Institutions Enforce Exclusive Immigration Rules: Mainstream Public Service Provision and the Implementation of a Hostile Environment for Irregular Migrants Living in Britain -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 A 'Hostile Environment' for Just One Category of Residents? -- 7.3 Public Sector Organisations and Street-Level Bureaucrats as Local Mediators of Competing Institutional Logics -- 7.4 Organisational Responses to Everyday Bordering Within Different Institutions -- 7.4.1 Everyday Bordering Within the Hospital -- 7.4.2 Everyday Bordering Within the University -- 7.4.3 Everyday Bordering Within the Local Welfare Office -- 7.5 Conclusion -- 7.6 List of Interviews -- References -- Chapter 8: Jewish Immigrants in Israel: Disintegration Within Integration? -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 Immigrant Integration: Desirability Versus Deservingness -- 8.3 The Absorption of Jewish Immigrants and Nation-Building -- 8.4 Towards Neoliberalisation: Tensions Between the State, the City and the Immigrants -- 8.5 Description of the Study -- 8.6 The Ethnicisation of Integration Paths: Between Moral Obligations and Economic Development Imperatives -- 8.7 Conclusion: Reframing of the Deserving vs Desirable Dichotomy under Neoliberalisation Processes -- References -- Chapter 9: Denying, While Demanding Integration: An Analysis of the Integration Paradox in Malta and Refugees' Coping Strategies -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 Methods and Analytical Framework -- 9.3 Political and Societal Reactions to Boat Migration and Integration in Malta -- 9.4 Arriving in Malta? -- 9.5 Journey of Hope and Misfortunes: Gabriel's Account -- 9.6 Life in Limbo -- 9.6.1 Reception -- 9.6.2 Allocation of Status -- 9.6.3 Participation in Education -- 9.6.4 Access to the Labour Market -- 9.7 Refugees Between Agency and Vulnerabilisation -- 9.8 Preserving the Imagined 'Maltese Mix'.
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|a 9.9 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 10: Governing Migrants and Refugees in Hungary: Politics of Spectacle, Negligence and Solidarity in a Securitising State -- 10.1 An Invitation to the Hungarian Border Spectacle -- 10.2 Reinforcing the National Community and Its Others -- 10.3 Quiet Neglect and Banal Marginalisation -- 10.4 Migrant Solidarity in Szeged and Pécs -- 10.5 Recovering the Politics -- 10.6 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 11: Conclusions: Perspectives and Puzzles in Researching Politics of (Dis)Integration -- 11.1 What Is Changing in Europe and Beyond? -- 11.2 (Dis)Integration Politics and Policies -- 11.2.1 Framing -- 11.2.2 Categorisation and Hierarchisation -- 11.2.3 Everyday Acts of (Dis)Integration -- 11.3 Conceptual and Methodological Puzzles -- References.
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|a Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
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|a Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2023. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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|a Electronic books.
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| 700 |
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|a Schweitzer, Reinhard.
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|i Print version:
|a Hinger, Sophie
|t Politics Of (Dis)Integration
|d Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2019
|z 9783030250881
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| 797 |
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|a ProQuest (Firm)
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| 830 |
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|a IMISCOE Research Series
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| 856 |
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|u https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/matrademy/detail.action?docID=5962835
|z Click to View
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