1st Edition

New European Identity and Citizenship

Edited By Remy Leveau, Khajida Mohsen-Finan Copyright 2002
    162 Pages
    by Routledge

    162 Pages
    by Routledge

    This title was first published in 2002. This study, undertaken with the support of the Ford Foundation under the scientific leadership of Khadija Mohsen-Finan, Remy Leveau and Catherine Wihtol de Wenden considers the new forms of citizenship and identity that have emerged within the settlements of immigrant populations in various countries in Europe. Through their claims to citizenship, shifting religious identities and by occupying the high ground both locally and at European level, these communities challenge long standing citizenship models and give full meaning to the concepts of supranational European citizenship. The contributors question whether such European citizenship will include all residents of Europe or whether it will serve to increase the exclusion felt by certain groups of migrants. In particular the contributors examine the implications of three emerging citizenship trends - the impact of the demand for Islam; the emergence of undocumented migrants and their inclusion in an increasingly stratified society; and finally, the rising tide of ordinary or political refugees who are challenging European citizenship on their own terms.

    1: Research on Immigration, Islam and Citizenship in Western Europe: How Far Has a Specific Transdisciplinary Domain Been Established?; 2: Muslims in Italy; 3: Foreign Immigration Comes to Spain: The Case of the Moroccans; 4: Belgium’s Regularization of Undocumented Aliens in 2000: Sign of a New Immigration Policy?; 5: European Citizenship and Migration; 6: Change and Continuity in French Islam; 7: Citizenship: Beyond Blood and Soil *; 8: Muslims and Citizenship in the United Kingdom; 9: Promoting A Faith-based Citizenship: The Case of Tariq Ramadan

    Biography

    Remy Leveau, Khajida Mohsen-Finan