1st Edition

Comparing Super-Diversity

Edited By Fran Meissner, Steven Vertovec Copyright 2016
    150 Pages
    by Routledge

    150 Pages
    by Routledge

    The concept of ‘super-diversity’ has received considerable attention since it was introduced in Ethnic and Racial Studies in 2007, reflecting a broadening interest in finding new ways to talk about contemporary social complexity. This book brings together a collection of essays which empirically and theoretically examine super-diversity and the multi-dimensional shifts in migration patterns to which the notion refers. These shifts entail a worldwide diversification of migration channels, differentiations of legal statuses, diverging patterns of gender and age, and variance in migrants’ human capital. Across the contributions, super-diversity is subject to two modes of comparison: (a) side-by-side studies contrasting different places and emergent conditions of super-diversity; and (b) juxtaposed arguments that have differentially found use in utilizing or criticizing ‘super-diversity’ descriptively, methodologically or with reference to policy and public practice. The contributions discuss super-diversity and its implications in nine cities located in eight countries and four continents.

    This book was originally published as a special issue of Ethnic and Racial Studies.

    1. Comparing super-diversity Fran Meissner and Steven Vertovec

    2. Migration in migration-related diversity? The nexus between superdiversity and migration studies Fran Meissner

    3. Delivering maternity services in an era of super-diversity: the challenges of novelty and newness Jenny Phillimore

    4. Not all the same after all? Superdiversity as a lens for the study of past migrations Jozefien De Bock

    5. Spatializing diversities, diversifying spaces: housing experiences and home space perceptions in a migrant hub of Istanbul Kristen Sarah Biehl

    6. (Super)diversity and the migration-social work nexus: a new lens on the field of access and inclusion? Paolo Boccagni

    7. Superdiversity and conviviality: exploring frameworks for doing ethnography in Southern European intercultural cities Beatriz Padilla, Joana Azevedo and Antonia Olmos-Alcaraz

    8. Mexico through a superdiversity lens: already-existing diversity meets new immigration Raúl Acosta-García and Esperanza Martínez-Ortiz

    9. New diversity, old anxieties in New Zealand: the complex identity politics and engagement of a settler society Paul Spoonley

    Biography

    Fran Meissner is Max Weber Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Political and Social Sciences at the European University Institute, Florence, Italy.

    Steven Vertovec is Director of the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Göttingen, Germany.