1st Edition

Migration and Divided Societies

Edited By Chris Gilligan, Susan Ball Copyright 2014
    136 Pages
    by Routledge

    136 Pages
    by Routledge

    The study of 'divided societies' has focused, historically, on either ethnic divides in colonial (or post-colonial) societies or on developed Western democracies which have ethnic power-sharing Government structures. The study of divided societies emerged historically at a moment when there was a growing interest in the study of immigration and inter-ethnic relations in developed industrial nations. These two sets of literature―on divided societies and on immigration and inter-ethnic relations―have developed largely in isolation from each other. Both sets of literature have also tended to focus on inter-ethnic relations, and have paid much less attention to migration. This edited collection sets out to fill this gap in the literature through examining migration and ethnic division. The case studies examined include developed industrial nations (Canada and Norway), a post-colonial country (Kenya) and three cases which feature regularly in the 'divided societies' literature (Bosnia, Northern Ireland and Israel). Taken together, these case-studies suggest ways in which migration intersects with and complicates ethnic divides in 'divided societies'.

    This book was published as a special issue of Ethnopolitics.

    1. Migration and Divided Societies  2. Borders of Understanding: Re-making Frontiers in the Russian–Norwegian Contact Zone  3. ‘Immigrants Don’t Ask for Self-government’: How Multiculturalism is (De)legitimized in Multinational Societies  4. Counting as Citizens: Recognition of the Nubians in the 2009 Kenyan Census  5. Reversing Segregation? The Property Restitution Process in Post-war Bosnia  6. Migration, Ethnonationalist Destinations and Social Divisions: Non-Jewish Immigrants in Israel  7. Fractures, Foreigners and Fitting In: Exploring Attitudes towards Immigration and Integration in ‘Post-Conflict’ Northern Ireland

    Biography

    Chris Gilligan is a Senior Lecturer in Sociology at the University of the West of Scotland and is Reviews Editor for the journal Ethnopolitics. He has edited collections on the peace process in Northern Ireland, and on migration.

    Susan Ball is Senior Lecturer in Contemporary British Civilisation at the University of Paris 8, France. Susan has undertaken research in the U.K. and France on socio-economic and ethnic segregation, discrimination and integration, and urban policy and real estate investment.