In the Netherlands, as in most other western European countries, the desirability and the governability of a multicultural society are topics of debate. In the last decade, this debate has increasingly centred on second-generation migrants, focusing on their high rates of crime and school drop-out. In the Dutch context, however, little scholarly research has paid attention to second-generation migrants’ own experiences. In this paper, I therefore focus on the perceptions of ethnic boundaries held by 12- to 19-year-old second-generation migrants and how they negotiate these boundaries in the low-income, multi-ethnic Feijenoord area of Rotterdam. The study shows that young people are used to living together with many different cultures and se...
In the past 40 years, researchers into migration and integration have focussed almost exclusively on...
Are there generational differences in ethnic and religious attachment among Muslim minorities in the...
In a time identified by many as one of “multicultural backlash,” we can observe a growing negative d...
In the Netherlands, as in most other western European countries, the desirability and the governabil...
The integration of migrants has been exercising minds in the Netherlands for several decades now. T...
Recently in numerous European countries of immigration, there has been a widespread ‘moral panic’ ab...
The Netherlands have a long tradition of immigration. After the Second World War (1939-1945) immigra...
In the past 40 years, researchers into migration and integration have focussed almost exclusively on...
This paper, written by Dr. Ayşe Tecmen, reviews the major political, social and cultural development...
The Netherlands has a large population of Turkish and Moroccan immigrants. With a population of app...
Abstract: Young people in Antwerp are brought up in a superdiverse majority-minority city. While som...
The discourse on multiculturalism in the Netherlands dates to the arrival of the so-called “guest wo...
Europe is on the path, though rocky, to political and cultural unity. After World War II, relatively...
Contains fulltext : 148854.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Are there gen...
Public debates on Muslim migration to Europe often describe religiosity as a barrier to immigrant in...
In the past 40 years, researchers into migration and integration have focussed almost exclusively on...
Are there generational differences in ethnic and religious attachment among Muslim minorities in the...
In a time identified by many as one of “multicultural backlash,” we can observe a growing negative d...
In the Netherlands, as in most other western European countries, the desirability and the governabil...
The integration of migrants has been exercising minds in the Netherlands for several decades now. T...
Recently in numerous European countries of immigration, there has been a widespread ‘moral panic’ ab...
The Netherlands have a long tradition of immigration. After the Second World War (1939-1945) immigra...
In the past 40 years, researchers into migration and integration have focussed almost exclusively on...
This paper, written by Dr. Ayşe Tecmen, reviews the major political, social and cultural development...
The Netherlands has a large population of Turkish and Moroccan immigrants. With a population of app...
Abstract: Young people in Antwerp are brought up in a superdiverse majority-minority city. While som...
The discourse on multiculturalism in the Netherlands dates to the arrival of the so-called “guest wo...
Europe is on the path, though rocky, to political and cultural unity. After World War II, relatively...
Contains fulltext : 148854.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Are there gen...
Public debates on Muslim migration to Europe often describe religiosity as a barrier to immigrant in...
In the past 40 years, researchers into migration and integration have focussed almost exclusively on...
Are there generational differences in ethnic and religious attachment among Muslim minorities in the...
In a time identified by many as one of “multicultural backlash,” we can observe a growing negative d...