Do nation-states act to facilitate or limit immigration and integration, how and why? How do nation-states themselves transform in understanding and interpreting rights respond to immigration? Does the European Union make a difference in terms of how immigrants are perceived or how they act as stakeholders in liberal democracies?
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Introduction — Saime Ozcurumez and Oliver Schmidtke * PART I: THE DEBATE ON THE ‘LIBERAL PARADOX’: OF STATES, RIGHTS AND SOCIAL CLOSURE * Who Belongs? Immigration, Democracy, and Citizenship — Joe Carens * Discrimination and Non-Citizens — Donald Galloway * National Sovereignty, Migration, and the Tenuous Hold of International Legality — Jeremey Webber * Borders in a ‘Post-National’ Age: Changing Modes of Inclusion and Exclusion in European Societies — Oliver Schmidtke * PART II: LIMITS OF A GOVERNING MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP * Migration and Belonging: Challenging the Inclusiveness of the National Welfare State — Michael Bommes * We Are All ‘Republican’ Now: The Change, Prospects, and Limits of Citizenship — Thomas Faist * The Emerging Migration State: Empirical Evidence from the United States — James Hollifield * Limits of Immigration and Integration Reform: The Terms of Debate — Imke Kruse * Citizenship as a Flexible Asset — Dietrich Thraenhardt * PART III: BY NATIONS BEYOND NATIONS? POLITICS OF EUROPEAN UNION IMMIGRATION POLICY * The European Union’s Evolving Migration and Asylum Policies — Andrew Geddes * Trans-Nationalism, the European Space, and the State — Riva Kastoryano * What Is Happening to Immigration Politics, and Who Benefits? — Ruud Koopmanns * Governing Immigration Policy in Europe: Do New Levels Bring in New Actors? — Saime Ozcurumez
Об авторе
Oliver Schmidtke is Professor of Political Science at the University of Victoria.
Saime Ozcurumez is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Mc Gill Institute.