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Issues of welfare access and 'deservedness' are increasingly
permeating political debates in present-day Scandinavian welfare
states, which are worldwide renowned for their comprehensive safety
net. Across the region, the Somalis are oftentimes singled out in
political debates about immigration and integration policies as the
'least integrated' group, if not as a 'burden' for public finances.
Against this background, Horizons of Security accounts for
historical patterns of integration from the specific point of view
of welfare and security among the Somalis in Scandinavia. Drawing
on qualitative interviews with the Somali diaspora, the book
explores how the Somalis are experiencing relevant changes in the
way they think and formulate expectations about the safety net,
often embracing elements of both welfare systems; at the same time,
not all of the integration measures set up by Scandinavian states
are conducive for alleviating Somalis' security issues, especially
in the immediate time after the resettlement. This dynamic can
cause considerable degrees of insecurity and long-term social
vulnerability among the Somalis. Horizons of Security offers
insight on integration and the organization of welfare to be
applied in comparative perspectives to other diasporas and world
areas.
This book provides various examples showing how Europe and Africa
can be conceptualized and researched as a single macro-area
connected by interrelated, global and multilevel dynamics. What
types of relations characterize Europe and Africa today? The nature
of the connections is neither clear nor unilinear: rather, they
appear dialectical, multifaceted and pointing in different
directions. This edited book explores narratives, contemporary
dynamics and historical legacies demonstrating the long-standing
relations between the continents, suggesting that the entangled
Euro-African relations in multiple fields should be intended as a
permanent condition for any analyses. The authors provide various
evidence of the fact that the two continents are deeply part of
shared but uneven structures of global wealth and power. Within
those structures, certain dynamics are constantly produced and
reproduced, yet new opportunities to subvert existing relations
have also emerged recently. Hence, instead of proposing conceptual
premises holding Africa and Europe as separate regions that get in
touch at specific moments in time, be it colonialism, the Cold War,
globalization, migration, this book critically considers that each
of the matters explored is anything but an episode in a more
complex, intertwined story that ultimately represents the
explanatory framework for present Euro-African relations.
Presenting a comprehensive account of the physical concepts and theoretical approaches developed for the study of the dynamical properties of liquids (or, more generally, of high-density fluids), at a microscopic level, this book first discusses the basic dynamical phenomena to be interpreted, as well as the various experimental probes. It then proceeds to an exposition of the sophisticated theoretical techniques needed for a satisfactory account of both single particle and collective motions. The complications are faced in a stepwise fashion, with special attention to the physical content of the results. Based on the results of the progress achieved in the last decade the book provides a satisfactory understanding of most of the phenomena characterising this fascinating field.
This Brief provides a survey of key political, social, and economic
issues affecting the Western Balkans region. Taking a two-pronged
conceptual approach focusing on fragmentation and integration, the
volume highlights commonalities and differences in a number of
simultaneous dynamics currently characterizing the region:
Europeanization and EU access, market integration, and migration
and socio-demographic transformations. Stressing the
interconnectedness of these issues, the volume synthesizes key
questions for the future of the region, such as the relationship
between socio-demographic trends and economic development, the
effects of depopulation on further EU integration, and the economic
and political repercussions of enhanced intra-regional trade.
Explicitly interdisciplinary, this Brief will be useful for
researchers and students specializing in the Balkans and Western
Balkans, post-socialist countries, European affairs, enlargement,
foreign policy, international relations, regional studies,
economics, economic transition, and socio-demographics.
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