Germany at the Crossroads: National Identity and the Challenges of Immigration

In both the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, German history was characterized by shifting political borders and territorial expansions and contractions. These changes correlate with extreme phases in the definition of nationhood: very broad, inclusive ones and very narrow, exclusive ones. Current...

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Veröffentlicht in:The International migration review 1995, Vol.29 (4), p.914-938
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description In both the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, German history was characterized by shifting political borders and territorial expansions and contractions. These changes correlate with extreme phases in the definition of nationhood: very broad, inclusive ones and very narrow, exclusive ones. Current problems with immigration and nationhood date back to the origins of the nation-building. They reflect unresolved contradictions between exclusive ideas of the nation-state and inclusive ideas of republican and universal principles of individual human and civil rights; between rigidly interpreted citizenship regulations and a liberal asylum law; and between the official notion of national homogeneity and increasing diversity created by immigration and refugee movements. The unforeseen consequences of unification, particularly increased immigration, have exacerbated existing tensions between exclusive and inclusive notions of nationhood. German democracy and political culture is challenged to readjust and redefine national interests and identity in the 1990s. In this process Germany must adapt to its status as an immigration society and the unavoidable consequences of increasing ethnocultural diversity.
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These changes correlate with extreme phases in the definition of nationhood: very broad, inclusive ones and very narrow, exclusive ones. Current problems with immigration and nationhood date back to the origins of the nation-building. They reflect unresolved contradictions between exclusive ideas of the nation-state and inclusive ideas of republican and universal principles of individual human and civil rights; between rigidly interpreted citizenship regulations and a liberal asylum law; and between the official notion of national homogeneity and increasing diversity created by immigration and refugee movements. The unforeseen consequences of unification, particularly increased immigration, have exacerbated existing tensions between exclusive and inclusive notions of nationhood. German democracy and political culture is challenged to readjust and redefine national interests and identity in the 1990s. 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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Jstor Complete Legacy; MEDLINE; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; HeinOnline Law Journal Library; Sociological Abstracts; Periodicals Index Online
subjects Asylum seekers
Citizenship
Demography
DEMOGRAPHY AND GEOGRAPHY
Developed Countries
Emigration and Immigration
Ethnic Groups
Europe
Evaluation Studies as Topic
Factors
Federal Republic of Germany
Germany
Group Unity
Human migration
HUMAN RIGHTS, DECLARATIONS OF HUMAN RIGHTS, AND HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSIONS (OFFICIAL ORGANIZATIONS)
Hungarian
Immigration
Immigration Policy
Industrialization
International migration
Jews
Labor
Laborers
Land Settlement
Legislation as Topic
Migrants
Migration
MIGRATION, IMMIGRATION AND EMIGRATION
Multiculturalism & pluralism
National Identity
Nationalism
Nationhood
Naturalization
Political Culture
Political migration
Population
Population Characteristics
Population Dynamics
Public Policy
REFUGEES
Seasonal Laborers
Self Actualization
Transients and Migrants
Tribes
UNIFICATION OR REUNIFICATION OF SOVEREIGN GEOGRAPHIC-POLITICAL ENTITIES
War
World wars
title Germany at the Crossroads: National Identity and the Challenges of Immigration
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