ABSTRACT

Integration is a key challenge facing modern society today. Integration and Resistance offers a new theoretical perspective for considering integration. By focusing on international immigrants and their organisations from a wider perspective the author demonstrates that the threat to social integration does not lie with the immigrants themselves but with global capital and the state. By analysis of data collected in Spain and Portugal the book breaks new ground in providing information on processes occurring in intermediate-capitalist countries that share some aspects of economic development, social and migration features with Northern Europe and America whilst also sharing other features such as the economic dependence of more impoverished countries.

chapter 1|15 pages

The complexity of integration

chapter 4|14 pages

Iberian urban areas

chapter |17 pages

Conclusions

chapter |6 pages

Appendix 2: Lists of interviewees

chapter |1 pages

Epilogue