1st Edition

Inclusion and Exclusion of Young Adult Migrants in Europe Barriers and Bridges

By Kirsten Fossan, Katrine Fangen Copyright 2010
    298 Pages
    by Routledge

    298 Pages
    by Routledge

    Inclusion and Exclusion of Young Adult Migrants in Europe presents analyses of research carried out during the course of the EUMARGINS research project, exploring the inclusion and exclusion of young adult immigrants across a range national contexts, including the Nordic welfare states, old colonial countries, Southern European nations and the Eastern European region. Scrutinising legal, policy and historical sources, as well as participation in labour market and education systems, this volume engages with multiple social arenas and spheres, to integrate research and provide a cohesive investigation of the dynamics of each national setting. In addition to the chapters focused on individual national contexts (Estonia, France, Italy, Norway, Spain, Sweden and the UK), the book also provides a comprehensive transnational analysis, developing a comparative perspective and explaining the overarching research framework. A carefully organized and comprehensive exploration of the exclusion and inclusion of young adult migrants in Europe, Inclusion and Exclusion of Young Adult Migrants in Europe will appeal to social scientists with interests in migration, population change, integration and exclusion.

    1: Introduction: Turning Adult, Becoming Nationalized; 2: Spain: Irregular Lives in the Southern Rim of Europe; 3: The UK: Imperial Spectres, New Migrations and the State of ‘Permanent Emergency'; 4: Estonia: A Post-Soviet Predicament; 5: Italy: Unreceptive Climate and Forced Adulthood; 6: Norway: The Pitfalls of Egalitarianism; 7: France: Diversity in the Republican Nation; 8: Sweden: Being a Stranger in the ‘People's Home'; 9: Assessing the Situation: Cross-National Comparison

    Biography

    Katrine Fangen lectures in the department of Sociology and Human Geography, and is the project coordinator of EUMARGINS at the University of Oslo, Norway Kirsten Fossan is Administration and Communications Officer of EUMARGINS at the University of Oslo, Norway Ferdinand Andreas Mohn is Research Assistant of EUMARGINS at the University of Oslo, Norway

    ’This is an excellent collection that brings together new research and scholarship on young migrants in contemporary European societies. It provides a vital insight into the everyday experiences of this important social group and the intersections between inclusion and exclusion’ John Solomos, City University London, UK 'The strength of this book lies in the detail of the contrasts that the comparative method stimulates. By having each chapter follow a common thematic framework the differences between the country cases stand out clearly, thwarting easy generalisations. Its focus specifically on young adult migrants is particularly valuable.' Roger Hewitt, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK 'The book originates from an EU-funded research project and covers seven European countries: Estonia, France, Italy, Norway, Spain, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. These countries differ greatly in their emigration and immigration experiences, their citizenship traditions, their social welfare and education systems, their labour market regulations and their overall post war politics. This variation results in the book’s greatest value. It permits the text to tease out how different political, economic, cultural and legal contexts affect a common group of people, notably young immigrant (first or second generation) young adults’ integration into their societies of settlement...[The book] makes an important contribution [...] by critically reviewing and synthesising existing findings and bibliographies regarding immigrant youth and the processes of inclusion and exclusion in the seven European countries studied. This volume offers an original and concise overview of the social, cultural, economic, political and legal context within which migrant youth live, study, work. As such, this volume will be of particular interest to graduate students and researchers who are seeking a comprehensive overview of the situation in specific immigration countries. Each country chapter