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One — ASSIMILATION AND ETHNIC DIVERSITY IN FRANCE
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- ILLUSTRATIONS vii
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS viii
- CONTRIBUTORS ix
- INTRODUCTION Recasting Canadian and European History in a Pluralist Perspective 1
-
Part I DIVERSITY IN EVERYDAY LIFE
- One — ASSIMILATION AND ETHNIC DIVERSITY IN FRANCE 15
- Two — ANTAGONISTIC GIRLS, OR WHY THE FOREIGNERS ARE THE REAL GERMANS 40
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Part II ECONOMIC ENCOUNTERS
- Three — TRANSNATIONALMIGRATION AND ENTREPRENEURSHIP OF MIGRANTS Between Turkey, Europe, and the Turkic World 65
- Four — “TOO BUSY WORKING, NO TIME FOR TALKING” Chinese Small Entrepreneurs, Social Mobility, and the Transfer of Cultural Identity in Belgium, Britain, and the Netherlands at the Margins of Multicultural Discourse 83
- Five — TRANSNATIONALISM AND IMMIGRANT ENTREPRENEURSHIP Iranian Disporic Narratives from the United States, France, England, and Germany 104
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Part III INCORPORATING DIVERSITY IN INSTITUTIONS AND LEGAL SYSTEMS
- Six — DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONAL PLURALISM AND CULTURAL DIVERSITY 131
- Seven — MULTICULTURALISM, SECULARISM, AND THE STATE 168
- Eight — SHOULD NATIONALMINORITIES/MAJORITIES SHARE COMMON INSTITUTIONS OR CONTROL THEIR OWN SCHOOLS? AComparison of Policies and Debates in Quebec, Northern Ireland, and Catalonia 186
- Nine — FAMILY NORMS AND CITIZENSHIP IN THE NETHERLANDS 212
- Ten — GLOBALMIGRANTHOOD, WHITENESS, AND THE ANXIETIES OF (IN)VISIBILITY Italians in London 227
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Part IV RECASTING THEMASTER NARRATIVE IN SOCIETY
- Eleven — CANADA A Pluralist Perspective 249
- Twelve — OFMINORITY POLICY AND (HOMOGENEOUS) MULTICULTURALISM Constructing Multicultural Societies on a Nationalist Model—the Post–World War II “Western” Experience 262
- Thirteen — A STATE OF MANY NATIONS The Construction of a Plural Spanish Society since 1976 284
- AFTERWORD Difference and Policymaking 308
- INDEX 317
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- ILLUSTRATIONS vii
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS viii
- CONTRIBUTORS ix
- INTRODUCTION Recasting Canadian and European History in a Pluralist Perspective 1
-
Part I DIVERSITY IN EVERYDAY LIFE
- One — ASSIMILATION AND ETHNIC DIVERSITY IN FRANCE 15
- Two — ANTAGONISTIC GIRLS, OR WHY THE FOREIGNERS ARE THE REAL GERMANS 40
-
Part II ECONOMIC ENCOUNTERS
- Three — TRANSNATIONALMIGRATION AND ENTREPRENEURSHIP OF MIGRANTS Between Turkey, Europe, and the Turkic World 65
- Four — “TOO BUSY WORKING, NO TIME FOR TALKING” Chinese Small Entrepreneurs, Social Mobility, and the Transfer of Cultural Identity in Belgium, Britain, and the Netherlands at the Margins of Multicultural Discourse 83
- Five — TRANSNATIONALISM AND IMMIGRANT ENTREPRENEURSHIP Iranian Disporic Narratives from the United States, France, England, and Germany 104
-
Part III INCORPORATING DIVERSITY IN INSTITUTIONS AND LEGAL SYSTEMS
- Six — DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONAL PLURALISM AND CULTURAL DIVERSITY 131
- Seven — MULTICULTURALISM, SECULARISM, AND THE STATE 168
- Eight — SHOULD NATIONALMINORITIES/MAJORITIES SHARE COMMON INSTITUTIONS OR CONTROL THEIR OWN SCHOOLS? AComparison of Policies and Debates in Quebec, Northern Ireland, and Catalonia 186
- Nine — FAMILY NORMS AND CITIZENSHIP IN THE NETHERLANDS 212
- Ten — GLOBALMIGRANTHOOD, WHITENESS, AND THE ANXIETIES OF (IN)VISIBILITY Italians in London 227
-
Part IV RECASTING THEMASTER NARRATIVE IN SOCIETY
- Eleven — CANADA A Pluralist Perspective 249
- Twelve — OFMINORITY POLICY AND (HOMOGENEOUS) MULTICULTURALISM Constructing Multicultural Societies on a Nationalist Model—the Post–World War II “Western” Experience 262
- Thirteen — A STATE OF MANY NATIONS The Construction of a Plural Spanish Society since 1976 284
- AFTERWORD Difference and Policymaking 308
- INDEX 317