UID:
kobvindex_HPB986523769
Format:
1 online resource (xi, 205 pages)
ISBN:
9781438466897
,
1438466897
Content:
"Based on the dual premise that nations need to learn from how immigration issues are handled in other modern democracies, and that adaptation to a new era of refugee and emigration movements is critical to a stable world, Marilyn Hoskin systematically compares the immigration policies of the United States, Britain, Germany, and France as prime examples of the challenges faced in the twenty-first century. Because immigration is a complex phenomenon, Understanding Immigration provides students with a multidisciplinary framework based on the thesis that a nation's geography, history, economy, and political system define its immigration policy. In the process, it is possible to weigh the influence of such factors as isolation, colonialism, labor imbalances, and tolerance of fringe parties and groups in determining how governments ultimately respond to both routine immigration requests and the more dramatic surges witnessed in both Europe and the United States since 2013"--Back cover
Note:
Immigration as a never-ending saga -- The United States : immigration model revisited -- Great Britain : reluctant parent to the former empire -- Germany : denial, acceptance, recruitment of immigrants -- France : haven or hell for foreigners? -- Comparing immigration lessons across nations.
Additional Edition:
Print version: Hoskin, Marilyn B., 1945- Understanding immigration. Albany : State University of New York Press, [2017] ISBN 9781438466873
Language:
English
Keywords:
Case studies.
URL:
View this content on Open Research Library.