This article offers a critical analysis of David Miller’s proposal that liberal immigration policies should be conceptualized in terms of a quasi-contract between receiving nations and immigrant groups, designed to ensure both that cultural diversity does not undermine trust among citizens and that immigrants are treated fairly. This proposal fails to address sufficiently two related concerns. Firstly, an open-ended, quasi-contractual requirement for cultural integration leaves immigrant groups exposed to arbitrary critique as insufficiently integrated and unworthy of trust as citizens. Secondly, the focus on national culture instead of citizenship obfuscates the close link between political membership and political trustworthiness. An exam...
The past decade has seen the retreat, if not demise, of multiculturalism in numerous Western liberal...
This study is devoted to the ways and means to justify a ‘more’ cosmopolitan realization of certain ...
The social trust argument asserts that a political community cannot survive without social trust, an...
This study examines the coherency of David Miller’s immigration argument in favour of a state regula...
What does social cohesion require in culturally diverse post-immigration societies? Immigration and ...
This research exploits the event of immigration to establish that institutions have a persistent e¤e...
Political aggression, social anomalies, and religious antagonism due to major-minor cultural differe...
Recent political disputes in liberal democratic states involve the concerns of immigrants and concer...
Immigration is a predominant subject in political debates today. While some politicians and media po...
What does social cohesion require in culturally diverse post-immigration societies? Immigration and ...
The paper estimates a social interactions model to study the impact of culture on US immigrants' dec...
We argue that conflict over immigration largely concerns who bears the burden of cultural transactio...
Immigration and the diversity it creates are at the heart of numerous debates in most Western libera...
One of the defining features of modern states is their incorporation of notions of political and soc...
Two explanations, institutionalization and socialization, are generally used to explain the impact o...
The past decade has seen the retreat, if not demise, of multiculturalism in numerous Western liberal...
This study is devoted to the ways and means to justify a ‘more’ cosmopolitan realization of certain ...
The social trust argument asserts that a political community cannot survive without social trust, an...
This study examines the coherency of David Miller’s immigration argument in favour of a state regula...
What does social cohesion require in culturally diverse post-immigration societies? Immigration and ...
This research exploits the event of immigration to establish that institutions have a persistent e¤e...
Political aggression, social anomalies, and religious antagonism due to major-minor cultural differe...
Recent political disputes in liberal democratic states involve the concerns of immigrants and concer...
Immigration is a predominant subject in political debates today. While some politicians and media po...
What does social cohesion require in culturally diverse post-immigration societies? Immigration and ...
The paper estimates a social interactions model to study the impact of culture on US immigrants' dec...
We argue that conflict over immigration largely concerns who bears the burden of cultural transactio...
Immigration and the diversity it creates are at the heart of numerous debates in most Western libera...
One of the defining features of modern states is their incorporation of notions of political and soc...
Two explanations, institutionalization and socialization, are generally used to explain the impact o...
The past decade has seen the retreat, if not demise, of multiculturalism in numerous Western liberal...
This study is devoted to the ways and means to justify a ‘more’ cosmopolitan realization of certain ...
The social trust argument asserts that a political community cannot survive without social trust, an...