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Based on a flagship research project for the Joseph Rowntree
Foundation's Immigration and Inclusion programme, this book argues
that social cohesion is achieved through people (new arrivals as
well as the long-term settled) being able to resolve the conflicts
and tensions within their day-to-day lives in ways that they find
positive and viable.
Providing critical assessment of the 'globalization thesis' through
sustained analysis of the nexus of processes underlying social and
cultural relations, this book examines, explores, and teases out
the many contradictions embedded within different discourses of
globalization. Together, the various chapters in the collection
offer a wide-ranging critique of those accounts which represent
globalization primarily, if not exclusively, as the classic story
of European modernity with its attendant narratives of ostensibly
unfettered movement of people, unmitigated economic growth and
social progress.
Based on a flagship research project for the Joseph Rowntree
Foundation's Immigration and Inclusion programme, this book argues
that social cohesion is achieved through people (new arrivals as
well as the long-term settled) being able to resolve the conflicts
and tensions within their day-to-day lives in ways that they find
positive and viable.
Providing critical assessment of the "globalization thesis" through
sustained analysis of the nexus of processes underlying social and
cultural relations, this text examines and explores the many
contradictions embedded within different discourses of
globalization. Together, the various chapters in the collection
offer a wide ranging critique of those accounts which represent
globalization primarily, if not exclusively, as the classic story
of European modernity with its attendant narratives of unfettered
movement of people, unmitigated economic growth and social
progress.
This work brings together research about a diverse range of groups:
Welsh, Irish, Jewish, Arab, White, African and Indian. The aim of
the book is to critique orthodox explanations in the field, drawing
upon the best of "old" and "new" theory. Contemporary questions
include issues about the black/white model of racism, the
underplaying of anti-Semitism the need to examine ethnic
majorities, as well as whiteness and the reconfiguration of the
United Kingdom.
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