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National majorities and their governments often demand that
immigrants and other minorities must be "good": they should work
hard, contribute to society, and adapt to dominant cultural norms.
Such stereotypical labels for national outsiders, ranging from
"good immigrants" to "good Muslims" and "model minorities", imply
that their inclusion and recognition becomes conditional on
fulfilling certain standards of behaviour and identity that are
predetermined by the national majority. The affected minorities
respond in diverse ways, at times striving to be recognised as
"good" and at times rejecting these regimes of conditional
inclusion and citizenship openly. This book offers ground-breaking
insights on how these dynamics of conditional inclusion and "good"
citizenship play out today, with a focus on migrant and
immigrant-origin minorities in Europe and the Americas. This book
shows that conditional inclusion is a globally widespread tool for
controlling and rank-ordering minorities. As immigrants respond
through diverse struggles for inclusion and recognition, these
struggles reveal a hidden battleground of citizenship on which
minorities negotiate who can be included and accepted in a given
state or society. Their experience shows that conditionality is not
an outlier of citizenship, but rather one of its universal core
principles. This book was originally published as a special issue
of Ethnic and Racial Studies.
Within the heart of the Jewish city of Tel Aviv, there is a hidden
reality-Palestinians who work, study, and live as an unseen
minority without access to equal urban citizenship. Grounded in the
everyday lives of Palestinians in Tel Aviv, The Invisible
Palestinians offers an ethnographic critique of the city's
self-proclaimed openness and liberalism. Andreas Hackl reveals that
Palestinians' access to the social and economic opportunities
afforded in Tel Aviv depends on keeping a low profile, which not
only disrupts opportunities for true urban citizenship but also
draws opposition from other Palestinians. By looking at the city
from the perspective of this hidden urban minority, Hackl uncovers
a critical opportunity to imagine and build a more inclusive and
just future for Tel Aviv. An important read, The Invisible
Palestinians explores the marginalized urban presence of both
Palestinian citizens of Israel and Palestinian laborers from the
West Bank in this quintessential Jewish Israeli city. Hackl reveals
a highly diverse Palestinian population that includes young people,
manual workers and middle-class professionals, residents and
commuters, students, artists, and activists, as well as members of
an underground Palestinian LGBT community who carefully navigate
their place in a city that refuses to recognize them.
Within the heart of the Jewish city of Tel Aviv, there is a hidden
reality-Palestinians who work, study, and live as an unseen
minority without access to equal urban citizenship. Grounded in the
everyday lives of Palestinians in Tel Aviv, The Invisible
Palestinians offers an ethnographic critique of the city's
self-proclaimed openness and liberalism. Andreas Hackl reveals that
Palestinians' access to the social and economic opportunities
afforded in Tel Aviv depends on keeping a low profile, which not
only disrupts opportunities for true urban citizenship but also
draws opposition from other Palestinians. By looking at the city
from the perspective of this hidden urban minority, Hackl uncovers
a critical opportunity to imagine and build a more inclusive and
just future for Tel Aviv. An important read, The Invisible
Palestinians explores the marginalized urban presence of both
Palestinian citizens of Israel and Palestinian laborers from the
West Bank in this quintessential Jewish Israeli city. Hackl reveals
a highly diverse Palestinian population that includes young people,
manual workers and middle-class professionals, residents and
commuters, students, artists, and activists, as well as members of
an underground Palestinian LGBT community who carefully navigate
their place in a city that refuses to recognize them.
Mobility is a keyword of late modernity that suggests an
increasingly unrestrained and interconnected world of individual
opportunities. However, as privileges enable some to live in a
seemingly borderless world, others remain excluded and
marginalized. Boundaries are created, modified and consolidated,
particularly in times of hypermobility. Evidently, mobility is
closely tied to immobility. This volume features ethnographic
research that challenges the concept of mobility with regard to
social inequalities and global hierarchies.
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