
Super-Diversity in Everyday Life
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Book Description
Presenting several in-depth studies, this book explores how super-diversity operates in every-day relations and interactions in a variety of urban settings in Western Europe and the United States.
The contributors raise a broad range of questions about the nature and effects of super-diversity. They ask if a quantitative increase in demographic diversity makes a qualitative difference in how diversity is experienced in urban neighborhoods, and what are the consequences of demographic change when people from a wide range of countries and social backgrounds live together in urban neighborhoods. The question at the core of the book is to what extent, and in what contexts, super-diversity leads to either the normalization of diversity or to added hostility towards and amongst those in different ethnic, racial, and religious groups. In cases where there is no particular ethno-racial or religious majority, are certain long-established groups able to continue to exert economic and political power, and is this continued economic and political dominance actually often facilitated by super-diversity?
With contributions from a number of European countries as well as the USA, this book will be of interest to researchers studying contemporary migration and ethnic diversity. It will also spark discussion amongst those focusing on multiculturalism in urban environments. This book was originally published as a special issue of Ethnic and Racial Studies.
Table of Contents
Introduction: super-diversity in everyday life
Nancy Foner, Jan Willem Duyvendak and Philip Kasinitz
1. Pioneer migrants and their social relations in super-diverse London
Susanne Wessendorf
2. Coming of age in multi-ethnic America: young adults’ experiences with diversity
Van C. Tran
3. Super-diversity as a methodological lens: re-centring power and inequality
Sofya Aptekar
4. A discourse of displacement: super-diversity, urban citizenship, and the politics of autochthony in Amsterdam
Paul Mepschen
5. "We have to teach them diversity": on demographic transformations and lived reality in an Amsterdam working-class neighbourhood
Fenneke Wekker
6. What about the mainstream? Assimilation in super-diverse times
Richard Alba and Jan Willem Duyvendak
7. Talking around super-diversity
Steven Vertovec
Editor(s)
Biography
Jan Willem Duyvendak is Distinguished Research Professor of Sociology at the University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands; and the director of the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities and Social Sciences.
Nancy Foner is Distinguished Professor of Sociology at Hunter College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, USA.
Philip Kasinitz is Presidential Professor of Sociology at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, USA.