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Immigration and Self-government of Minority Nations

by Ricard Zapata-Barrero (Volume editor)
©2009 Edited Collection 180 Pages
Series: Diversitas, Volume 3

Summary

During the last two decades, the debate on multiculturalism has been one-dimensional. It has deployed arguments related to cultural demands linked either to feminism, immigration, or national minorities. Little attention has been given to the relations between these dimensions, and how they affect each other. The purpose of this book is to set a research agenda around the interaction between cultural demands of immigrants and minority nations.
The primary aim is to establish basic normative arguments while advancing an institutional analysis in three contexts: Quebec, Flanders and Catalonia. Each part contains two chapters that address the topic in terms of how immigration is seen from a self-government perspective, or how self-government is interpreted from an immigration perspective. The different chapters raise questions related to how this interaction challenges the idea of a culturally homogeneous nation-state, and also pushes us to other conceptualisations of «political community» and de-nationalised forms of citizenship. Current debates on diversity have failed to address these issues in societies where a dual belonging exists.

Details

Pages
180
Year
2009
ISBN (Softcover)
9789052015477
Language
English
Keywords
Diversité culturelle Sciences politiques Immigration dans le contexte des nations minoritaires et dualité d'appartenance
Published
Bruxelles, Bern, Berlin, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2009. 180 pp., 16 tables

Biographical notes

Ricard Zapata-Barrero (Volume editor)

The Editor: Ricard Zapata-Barrero is Associate Professor of Political Theory in the Department of Social and Political Science, Universitat Pompeu Fabra (Barcelona, Spain). He is director of the Interdisciplinary Research Group on Immigration (Grup de Recerca interdisciplinari sobre immigració – GRITIM) and of the Master program on immigration management at UPF. He is currently working on different lines of research: the link between different types of cultural pluralism, such as immigration and national minorities, an ethics of migration politics, the political theory of borders, the regional Euromediterranean politics of immigration, and diversity accommodation policies. His most relevant publications include Citizenship Policies in the Age of Diversity (2009, ed.), Fundamentos de los discursos políticos en torno a la inmigración (2009), Políticas y gobernabilidad de la inmigración en España (2009, ed.), La inmigración en naciones minoritarias (2008), Conceptos políticos en el contexto español (2007, ed.), Multiculturalism, Muslims and Citizenship: A European Approach (co-edited with T. Modood and A. Triandafyllidou, 2006), and Multiculturalidad e inmigración (2004).

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Title: Immigration and Self-government of Minority Nations