Inter-Group Relations and Migrant Integration in European Cities : Changing Neighbourhoods.
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Other Authors: | |
Format: | eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Cham :
Springer International Publishing AG,
2016.
|
Edition: | 1st ed. |
Series: | IMISCOE Research Series
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Click to View |
Table of Contents:
- Intro
- Contents
- Introduction
- 1 Tackling the Dilemma of Local Variations in Ethnic Conflict and Integration
- 2 Eleven European Neighbourhoods: On the Diversity of Diversity
- 3 Beyond 'Groupism'
- 4 A Multilevel and Multi-focused Analysis of Inter-group Relations
- Bibliography
- They've Got Their Wine Bars, We've Got Our Pubs': Housing, Diversity and Community in Two South London Neighbourhoods
- 1 The Making of Inner-City Diversity
- 2 Why Housing Matters
- 2.1 Social Housing: Outline of the Broader Picture
- 3 Housing and Settlement in Bermondsey and Camberwell
- 3.1 Immigrant Settlement Patterns and Housing Pathways
- 3.2 Emerging Generational Divides
- 3.3 Wine Bars and Pubs
- 4 Housing and Community
- 4.1 The Estate as Community
- 4.2 Gentrification and the Estate
- 5 Housing Pathways and the Un-Making of Community
- Bibliography
- Rise and Resolution of Ethnic Conflicts in Nuremberg Neighbourhoods
- 1 Ethnicization of Neighbourhood-Level Conflicts
- 2 Village-Like Lifestyles Within the City: Werderau
- 2.1 Are Migrants to Blame for the Neighbourhood Conflict?
- Early Characteristics of the Neighbourhood Are Setting the Stage for the Development of a Structural Conflict
- Framing and Ethnicization Leads to the Definition of the Conflict as Group Conflict Between Germans and Migrants
- Outside Intervention Intensifies the Conflict Mobilization Process
- Political Change and Mediation Lead to Conflict Solution
- 2.2 The Double Nature of Space in Werderau: Connecting Potential and Subject of Dispute
- 2.3 Group Relations in Werderau: Who Do People Associate with?
- 2.4 The Policy Community: Promoters or Disablers of Inter-group Relations?
- 2.5 Lessons for Werderau's Future
- 3 High Diversity in an Urban Structure: Langwasser.
- 3.1 Why Did a Project for the Promotion of Inter-group Relations Lead to a Conflict?
- Insufficient Involvement of Residents and Subsequent Fears Lead to the Development of a Structural Conflict
- Right-Wing Activists Contribute to the Framing and Ethnicization of the Conflict
- Mobilization Turns into Counter-Mobilization
- Right-Wing Agitation Loses Sympathisers, Garden Project Gains Sympathisers: A Conflict Solution Develops
- 3.2 The Policy Community in Langwasser: Mediating Functions
- 4 High Cultural and Ethnic Diversity: Gostenhof
- 4.1 The Function of Places: The Main Street as 'the' Place for Interactions
- 4.2 Social Relations and Diversity in Gostenhof: Migrants Are No Longer a Minority
- 4.3 The Policy Community: Contributions to the Positive Image of Gostenhof
- 5 Lessons Learned from the Neighbourhood Analysis
- Bibliography
- Beyer, A. (1990). Die Werderau: Sozialer Siedlungsbau des Architekten Ludwig Ruff von 1909 bis 1934, Band 2. Erlangen/Nuremberg: University of Erlangen-Nuernberg.
- Online Sources
- Comfortably Invisible: The Life of Chinese Migrants Around 'The Four Tigers Market' in Budapest
- 1 Inter-group Relations in Statistics and Inhabitants' Perceptions
- 2 Chinese Migration to Hungary
- 3 Does Place Really Matter? Inter-group Relations in Commercial and Residential Areas
- 3.1 The Two Commercial Interaction Sites
- 3.2 Residential Interaction Sites
- 4 "A Marginal Question": The Policymakers' Point of View on Immigration
- 5 Concluding Remarks
- Bibliography
- Online Sources
- Inter-Group Perceptions and Representations in Two Barcelona Neighbourhoods: Poble Sec and Sagrada Família Compared
- 1 The Deep Roots of Diversity in a Mediterranean Metropolis
- 1.1 Methodological Considerations
- 2 The Urban and Social Context of Social Interaction in Words and Numbers.
- 2.1 Narrow Streets Promoting Interactions versus Busy Wide Arteries Separating Crowds
- 2.2 A Neighbourhood with Soul' versus an Impersonal Dormitory Area with a Big Cathedral
- 2.3 Visible and Invisible Immigrants
- 3 Neighbours Talking About Neighbours: Who, What, and Where?
- 3.1 Sagrada Família: Dense but Cold
- 3.2 'Caliu de Barri': Dense and Warm Poble Sec
- 4 (Un)Covering the Neighbourhoods: Bad News Sells Best
- 5 A Growing Demand for More Spaces of Encounter
- Bibliography
- Turin in Transition: Shifting Boundaries in Two Post-Industrial Neighbourhoods
- 1 Different Paths out of the Industrial Era
- 2 The Residents' Voices
- 2.1 'The Village in the City': The Peaceful Image of San Paolo
- 2.2 'We are the People of the Ghetto': Stigma and Pride in Barriera di Milano
- 3 Urban Spaces and Social Management
- 3.1 The New Birth of the San Paolo 'Village'
- 3.2 Barriera di Milano, a Never-ending Construction Site
- 4 Daily Conflicts in Public Spaces
- 4.1 Young Versus Elderly in Barriera di Milano: The Fight Against Drug Dealing
- 4.2 Peruvian Immigrants as the 'Social Problem' of San Paolo
- 5 The Public Baths, the Moroccan Rapper, and the Italian Wood Engraver
- 6 Barriera di Milano and San Paolo: So Near, Yet So Far…
- Bibliography
- News Media and Immigration in the EU: Where and How the Local Dimension Matters
- 1 News Media and Migration in EU States
- 1.1 The Criminalization of Migrants and Media Self-Criticism
- 1.2 Newcomers and the Asylum Issue
- 1.3 Muslim Migrants and 'the Muslim Community'
- 2 Re-articulating the Local/National Nexus in the News
- 2.1 National, Local, Hyper-Local and the News Events: A Framework
- 2.2 Images of the Neighbourhoods and 'Their Migrants/Minorities' in the Local Media: Turin and Barcelona
- 2.3 Moral Panics and the Ethnic Issue: The Local Goes National?.
- A Sequential Structure for Moral Panics
- (Serial) Moral Panics and the Ethnic Issue
- The Failures of Moral Panics: Discussing the Neighbourhood's Power
- Case Studies from the Neighbourhoods
- Via Padova in Milan
- Werderau in Nuremberg
- Langwasser in Nuremberg
- San Paolo in Turin
- 3 Conclusions
- Bibliography
- Boundaries, Barriers and Bridges: Comparative Findings from European Neighbourhoods
- 1 Five Key Ingredients of Neighbourhood-Level Boundary-Making
- 2 The Role of Places in Boundary-Making and Inter-Group Relations
- 2.1 Places as Material Stakes for (Ethnic) Conflict
- 2.2 Places as Symbolic Stakes: Ethnic Tensions in Post-Industrial Neighbourhoods
- 2.3 Places as 'Connecting Opportunities': Is Integration Transferable?
- 3 Policy Community Cohesion as a Factor of Narrative Autonomy
- 4 A Wider Look: Integration as a Threatened Local Public Good
- Bibliography
- Annex 1: The Investigated Urban Contexts. Comparative Tables
- Annex 2: Methodological Annex
- Analysis of Social and Urban Context
- Local Policy Communities' Perceptions and Media Representations
- Ethnographic Fieldwork
- Participatory Tools
- Advisory Committee.