Outsiders No More?
Models of Immigrant Political Incorporation
Herausgeber: Hochschild, Jennifer; Gay, Claudine; Chattopadhyay, Jacqueline
Outsiders No More?
Models of Immigrant Political Incorporation
Herausgeber: Hochschild, Jennifer; Gay, Claudine; Chattopadhyay, Jacqueline
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Models of Immigrant Political Incorporation brings together a multidisciplinary group of researchers. Each develops a systematic model permitting the study of who is an immigrant, what is politics, and how incorporation occurs or is blocked. Ranging across North America and Western Europe, it is indispensable for analysts and activists alike.
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Models of Immigrant Political Incorporation brings together a multidisciplinary group of researchers. Each develops a systematic model permitting the study of who is an immigrant, what is politics, and how incorporation occurs or is blocked. Ranging across North America and Western Europe, it is indispensable for analysts and activists alike.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 368
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Juli 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 157mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 454g
- ISBN-13: 9780199311323
- ISBN-10: 0199311323
- Artikelnr.: 38137174
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 368
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Juli 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 157mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 454g
- ISBN-13: 9780199311323
- ISBN-10: 0199311323
- Artikelnr.: 38137174
Jennifer L. Hochschild is Henry LaBarre Jayne Professor of Government, Professor of African and African American Studies, and Harvard College Professor at Harvard University. Jacqueline Chattopadhyay is Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science and Public Administration at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. Claudine Gay is Professor of Government and of African and African-American Studies at Harvard University Michael Jones-Correa is Professor of Government at Cornell University.
* Table of Contents
* Authors' Biosketches
* Acknowledgements and Dedication
* Introduction, by the editors
* I. Are Immigrants Distinctive?
* 1. Incorporation versus Assimilation: The Need for Conceptual
Differentiation, S. Karthick Ramakrishnan
* 2. Is Incorporation of Unauthorized Immigrants Possible? Inclusion
and Contingency for Non-Status Migrants and Legal Immigrants, Maria
Lorena Cook
* 3. Tracks of Immigrant Political Incorporation, Christian Joppke
* 4. Ideas and Institutions in Immigrant Political Incorporation,
Robert C. Lieberman
* 5. Immigrant Political Incorporation: Beyond the Foreign-Born vs.
Native-Born Distinction, Janelle Wong
* II. How Broad Is Politics In Immigrant Political Incorporation?
* 6. Dimensions of Immigrant Political Incorporation, John Mollenkopf
* 7. Culture, Context, and the Political Incorporation of
Immigrant-origin Groups in Europe, Rafaela Dancygier
* 8. Structuring Immigrants' Civic-Political Incorporation into the
Host Society, Ewa Morawska
* 9. The Importance of Demographic and Social Contexts in Determining
Political Outcomes, Monica McDermott
* 10. Thru-ways, By-ways and Cul-de-sacs of Immigrant Political
Incorporation, Michael Jones-Correa
* III. How Should One Approach the Topic of Incorporation?
* 11. "The Great Concern of Government ": Public Policy as Material and
Symbolic Resources, Irene Bloemraad
* 12. The Political Economy of Immigrant Incorporation into the Welfare
State, Nolan McCarty
* 13. Continuity and Change in the Citizenship Laws of Europe: The
Impact of Public Mobilization and the Far Right, Marc Morjé Howard
* 14. Political Opportunity Structures and the Mobilization of
Anti-Immigrant Actors: Modeling Effects on Immigrant Political
Incorporation, Michael Minkenberg
* 15. Behavioral and Attitudinal Components of Immigrant Political
Incorporation, Gary Segura
* 16. Assimilation and Political Attitude Tradeoffs, Rahsaan Maxwell
* 17. Moving Up and In: Two Dimensions of Immigrant Political
Incorporation, Jennifer Hochschild
* 18. Acquiescence or Transformation? Divergent Paths of Political
Incorporation in America, Gary Gerstle
* IV. Rethinking Immigrant Political Incorporation: What Have We
Learned, and What Next? Xavier de Sousa Briggs
* Authors' Biosketches
* Acknowledgements and Dedication
* Introduction, by the editors
* I. Are Immigrants Distinctive?
* 1. Incorporation versus Assimilation: The Need for Conceptual
Differentiation, S. Karthick Ramakrishnan
* 2. Is Incorporation of Unauthorized Immigrants Possible? Inclusion
and Contingency for Non-Status Migrants and Legal Immigrants, Maria
Lorena Cook
* 3. Tracks of Immigrant Political Incorporation, Christian Joppke
* 4. Ideas and Institutions in Immigrant Political Incorporation,
Robert C. Lieberman
* 5. Immigrant Political Incorporation: Beyond the Foreign-Born vs.
Native-Born Distinction, Janelle Wong
* II. How Broad Is Politics In Immigrant Political Incorporation?
* 6. Dimensions of Immigrant Political Incorporation, John Mollenkopf
* 7. Culture, Context, and the Political Incorporation of
Immigrant-origin Groups in Europe, Rafaela Dancygier
* 8. Structuring Immigrants' Civic-Political Incorporation into the
Host Society, Ewa Morawska
* 9. The Importance of Demographic and Social Contexts in Determining
Political Outcomes, Monica McDermott
* 10. Thru-ways, By-ways and Cul-de-sacs of Immigrant Political
Incorporation, Michael Jones-Correa
* III. How Should One Approach the Topic of Incorporation?
* 11. "The Great Concern of Government ": Public Policy as Material and
Symbolic Resources, Irene Bloemraad
* 12. The Political Economy of Immigrant Incorporation into the Welfare
State, Nolan McCarty
* 13. Continuity and Change in the Citizenship Laws of Europe: The
Impact of Public Mobilization and the Far Right, Marc Morjé Howard
* 14. Political Opportunity Structures and the Mobilization of
Anti-Immigrant Actors: Modeling Effects on Immigrant Political
Incorporation, Michael Minkenberg
* 15. Behavioral and Attitudinal Components of Immigrant Political
Incorporation, Gary Segura
* 16. Assimilation and Political Attitude Tradeoffs, Rahsaan Maxwell
* 17. Moving Up and In: Two Dimensions of Immigrant Political
Incorporation, Jennifer Hochschild
* 18. Acquiescence or Transformation? Divergent Paths of Political
Incorporation in America, Gary Gerstle
* IV. Rethinking Immigrant Political Incorporation: What Have We
Learned, and What Next? Xavier de Sousa Briggs
* Table of Contents
* Authors' Biosketches
* Acknowledgements and Dedication
* Introduction, by the editors
* I. Are Immigrants Distinctive?
* 1. Incorporation versus Assimilation: The Need for Conceptual
Differentiation, S. Karthick Ramakrishnan
* 2. Is Incorporation of Unauthorized Immigrants Possible? Inclusion
and Contingency for Non-Status Migrants and Legal Immigrants, Maria
Lorena Cook
* 3. Tracks of Immigrant Political Incorporation, Christian Joppke
* 4. Ideas and Institutions in Immigrant Political Incorporation,
Robert C. Lieberman
* 5. Immigrant Political Incorporation: Beyond the Foreign-Born vs.
Native-Born Distinction, Janelle Wong
* II. How Broad Is Politics In Immigrant Political Incorporation?
* 6. Dimensions of Immigrant Political Incorporation, John Mollenkopf
* 7. Culture, Context, and the Political Incorporation of
Immigrant-origin Groups in Europe, Rafaela Dancygier
* 8. Structuring Immigrants' Civic-Political Incorporation into the
Host Society, Ewa Morawska
* 9. The Importance of Demographic and Social Contexts in Determining
Political Outcomes, Monica McDermott
* 10. Thru-ways, By-ways and Cul-de-sacs of Immigrant Political
Incorporation, Michael Jones-Correa
* III. How Should One Approach the Topic of Incorporation?
* 11. "The Great Concern of Government ": Public Policy as Material and
Symbolic Resources, Irene Bloemraad
* 12. The Political Economy of Immigrant Incorporation into the Welfare
State, Nolan McCarty
* 13. Continuity and Change in the Citizenship Laws of Europe: The
Impact of Public Mobilization and the Far Right, Marc Morjé Howard
* 14. Political Opportunity Structures and the Mobilization of
Anti-Immigrant Actors: Modeling Effects on Immigrant Political
Incorporation, Michael Minkenberg
* 15. Behavioral and Attitudinal Components of Immigrant Political
Incorporation, Gary Segura
* 16. Assimilation and Political Attitude Tradeoffs, Rahsaan Maxwell
* 17. Moving Up and In: Two Dimensions of Immigrant Political
Incorporation, Jennifer Hochschild
* 18. Acquiescence or Transformation? Divergent Paths of Political
Incorporation in America, Gary Gerstle
* IV. Rethinking Immigrant Political Incorporation: What Have We
Learned, and What Next? Xavier de Sousa Briggs
* Authors' Biosketches
* Acknowledgements and Dedication
* Introduction, by the editors
* I. Are Immigrants Distinctive?
* 1. Incorporation versus Assimilation: The Need for Conceptual
Differentiation, S. Karthick Ramakrishnan
* 2. Is Incorporation of Unauthorized Immigrants Possible? Inclusion
and Contingency for Non-Status Migrants and Legal Immigrants, Maria
Lorena Cook
* 3. Tracks of Immigrant Political Incorporation, Christian Joppke
* 4. Ideas and Institutions in Immigrant Political Incorporation,
Robert C. Lieberman
* 5. Immigrant Political Incorporation: Beyond the Foreign-Born vs.
Native-Born Distinction, Janelle Wong
* II. How Broad Is Politics In Immigrant Political Incorporation?
* 6. Dimensions of Immigrant Political Incorporation, John Mollenkopf
* 7. Culture, Context, and the Political Incorporation of
Immigrant-origin Groups in Europe, Rafaela Dancygier
* 8. Structuring Immigrants' Civic-Political Incorporation into the
Host Society, Ewa Morawska
* 9. The Importance of Demographic and Social Contexts in Determining
Political Outcomes, Monica McDermott
* 10. Thru-ways, By-ways and Cul-de-sacs of Immigrant Political
Incorporation, Michael Jones-Correa
* III. How Should One Approach the Topic of Incorporation?
* 11. "The Great Concern of Government ": Public Policy as Material and
Symbolic Resources, Irene Bloemraad
* 12. The Political Economy of Immigrant Incorporation into the Welfare
State, Nolan McCarty
* 13. Continuity and Change in the Citizenship Laws of Europe: The
Impact of Public Mobilization and the Far Right, Marc Morjé Howard
* 14. Political Opportunity Structures and the Mobilization of
Anti-Immigrant Actors: Modeling Effects on Immigrant Political
Incorporation, Michael Minkenberg
* 15. Behavioral and Attitudinal Components of Immigrant Political
Incorporation, Gary Segura
* 16. Assimilation and Political Attitude Tradeoffs, Rahsaan Maxwell
* 17. Moving Up and In: Two Dimensions of Immigrant Political
Incorporation, Jennifer Hochschild
* 18. Acquiescence or Transformation? Divergent Paths of Political
Incorporation in America, Gary Gerstle
* IV. Rethinking Immigrant Political Incorporation: What Have We
Learned, and What Next? Xavier de Sousa Briggs