TY - JOUR
T1 - Pull up the roots
T2 - response to Dahinden, Goodman, Statham and Schinkel on The Integration Nation: Immigration and Colonial Power in Liberal Democracies (Polity 2022)
AU - Favell, Adrian
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - A rejoinder to the critical reviews of The Integration Nation: Immigration and Colonial Power in Liberal Democracies by Janine Dahinden, Sara Wallace Goodman, Paul Statham, and Willem Schinkel. The Integration Nation lays out a manifesto for critical migration studies, that builds on a critique of the mainstream literature and its normative linear notions of immigration, integration and citizenship. Two readers see the argument and its conceptualization of the field as almost self evident, while two read it as a frustrating provocation that elicits a strong, critical reaction. The rejoinder responds to these reflections, and reiterates the book's goal of laying the foundations of a new political demography. Conventional thinking on international migration, minorities and diversity, it argues, sustains the colonial power of advanced liberal democracies in the North Atlantic West, built on vast global inequalities in citizenship status, and mechanisms of selection, extraction, exclusion and effacement of non-national populations.
AB - A rejoinder to the critical reviews of The Integration Nation: Immigration and Colonial Power in Liberal Democracies by Janine Dahinden, Sara Wallace Goodman, Paul Statham, and Willem Schinkel. The Integration Nation lays out a manifesto for critical migration studies, that builds on a critique of the mainstream literature and its normative linear notions of immigration, integration and citizenship. Two readers see the argument and its conceptualization of the field as almost self evident, while two read it as a frustrating provocation that elicits a strong, critical reaction. The rejoinder responds to these reflections, and reiterates the book's goal of laying the foundations of a new political demography. Conventional thinking on international migration, minorities and diversity, it argues, sustains the colonial power of advanced liberal democracies in the North Atlantic West, built on vast global inequalities in citizenship status, and mechanisms of selection, extraction, exclusion and effacement of non-national populations.
KW - Decolonization
KW - Immigration
KW - Integration
KW - Migration studies
KW - Mobilities
KW - Nationalism
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85144034867
U2 - 10.1080/01419870.2022.2150523
DO - 10.1080/01419870.2022.2150523
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85144034867
SN - 0141-9870
VL - 46
SP - 1639
EP - 1649
JO - Ethnic and Racial Studies
JF - Ethnic and Racial Studies
IS - 8
ER -