ABSTRACT

This work seeks to explore the contemporary challenge of government in multicultural societies, drawing together a wide range of contributors to examine how ethnic difference could better understood and mediated by modern nation states.

Divided into three sections, the book centres round the notion that changing patterns of migration bring escalating obstacles to integration or assimilation. In the first section, contributors focus on the theory that immigrants are the actors that catalyze contemporary multicultural dilemmas within states, with a particular focus on diaspora and how a diaspora community may differ in some ways from other kinds of immigrant community. Section two identifies key factors in shaping ethnic identity before moving on to examine the state of the debate over whether identity can be changed or manipulated. The contributors to this section provide valuable insights into the catalysts and causes of ethnic division and tension, by showing factors in the development of ethnic identity. In the third section, the focus turns to strategies for mediating multicultural challenges and managing internal diversity in multicultural society, offering structural and institutional solutions with evidence of application in specific cases and country contexts.

Offering a comprehensive overview of this pressing issue and drawing on a wide range of case studies, this work will be of interest to students and scholars of migration, political sociology & race and ethnic studies.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

The multicultural dilemma

part |34 pages

Understanding key actors in the growth of multicultural societies

chapter |15 pages

The limits of grand migration theory

Embedding experiences of immigration and immigrant incorporation within their appropriate national, regional, and local settings

chapter |17 pages

Globalization, diaspora, and transnationalism

Challenges and opportunities for the Indian diaspora

part |122 pages

Factors in ethnic identity and nationalism

chapter |18 pages

Conceptualizing the Nation: Myths, Imagined Communities, or Multiethnic Realities?

The cases of Israel, France, and the United States

chapter |16 pages

Islamic identity, yes, Islamist parties, no

The mainstreaming of political Islam and its challenge for Islamist parties

chapter |19 pages

The Importance of citizenship criteria

André Suarès and Jewishness in Germany between ethnicity, religion, and nationalism

chapter |17 pages

Learning to remember

Education and collective memory formation as a tool in reconciliation

chapter |17 pages

Institutions to bridge troubled waters

Water-user associations and interests, identities, conflict, and cooperation

part |71 pages

Mediating multicultural challenges

chapter |15 pages

The long twilight of Jacobinism

Evaluating the French assimilationist model

chapter |8 pages

Conclusion

Grappling with ethnic difference in multicultural societies