ABSTRACT

This book explores how the rising numbers of refugees entering Europe from 2015 onwards played into fears of cultural, religious, and ethnic differences across the continent. The migrant, or refugee crisis, prompted fierce debate about European norms and values, with some commentators questioning whether mostly Muslim refugees would be able to adhere to these values, and be able to integrate into a predominantly Christian European society. In this volume, philosophers, legal scholars, anthropologists and sociologists, analyze some of these debates and discuss practical strategies to reconcile the values that underpin the European project with multiculturalism and religious pluralism, whilst at the same time safeguarding the rights of refugees to seek asylum.

Country case studies in the book are drawn from France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain, Sweden, and the United Kingdom; representing states with long histories of immigration, countries with a more recent refugee arrivals, and countries that want to keep refugees at bay and refuse to admit even the smallest number of asylum seekers. Contributors in the book explore the roles which national and local governments, civil society, and community leaders play in these debates and practices, and ask what strategies are being used to educate refugees about European values, and to facilitate their integration.

At a time when debates on refugees and European norms continue to rage, this book provides an important interdisciplinary analysis which will be of interest to European policy makers, and researchers across the fields of migration, law, philosophy, anthropology, sociology, and political science.

The Open Access version of this book, available at

https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/e/9780429279317, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license

chapter 1|11 pages

European norms and values and the refugee crisis

Issues and challenges
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chapter 2|13 pages

Echoes of memories of forced displacement

The case of the Greek island of Lesvos
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chapter 3|14 pages

Against the expansion of racism

The experience of the Camp des Milles
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chapter 4|20 pages

The Moral Panic Button 1

Construction and consequences
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chapter 6|17 pages

Between closing borders to refugees and welcoming Ukrainian workers

Polish migration law at the crossroads
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chapter 7|20 pages

Debating deportation detention in Germany

The many faces of the rule of law
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chapter 8|17 pages

Integration by contract and the ‘values of the Republic’

Investigating the French State as a value promoter for migrants (2003–2016)
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chapter 9|21 pages

Box-ticking exercise or real inclusion?

Challenges of including refugees’ perspectives in EU policy
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chapter 10|17 pages

Being a ‘refuge-city’

Welcoming rhetorics in Paris and Barcelona
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chapter 11|19 pages

Holding course

Civil society organizations’ value expressions in the Swedish legislative consultation system before and after 2015
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chapter 12|16 pages

Community-based sponsorship of refugees resettling in the UK

British values in action?
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chapter 13|19 pages

Crisis and Willkommenskultur

Civil society volunteering for refugees in Germany
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chapter 14|16 pages

Cosmopolitanism at the crossroads

Swedish immigration policy after the 2015 refugee crisis
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chapter 15|17 pages

(Un)Deserving refugees

Contested access to the ‘community of value’ in Italy
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chapter 17|17 pages

Proclaiming and practicing pro-immigration values in Poland

A case study of Poznań
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