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At a time when diversity is taking an increasingly prominent place
in public and academic debate, Situational Diversity offers a new
perspective by understanding diversity framed in the local context,
characterised through different forms of social differentiation.
Based on ethnographic fieldwork and archival research on
migration-driven diversity in two neighbourhoods in Stuttgart
(Germany) and Glasgow (United Kingdom), the book presents a concept
that takes into account the contingent and emergent nature of
social differentiation while at the same time explaining the
stability of modes of differentiation. The comparative approach
provides a nuanced analysis of how diversity in urban environments
occurs as a result of locally, socially and temporally specific
practices. In this book, Kluckmann discusses how social work, city
administration and volunteer work prefigure positions and relations
of people in the context of migration. Thus, it will appeal to
students and scholars of social and cultural anthropology, European
ethnology, sociology, human/cultural geography, cultural studies in
addition to practitioners in the fields of intercultural relations,
social and public policy as well as urban development.
At a time when diversity is taking an increasingly prominent place
in public and academic debate, Situational Diversity offers a new
perspective by understanding diversity framed in the local context,
characterised through different forms of social differentiation.
Based on ethnographic fieldwork and archival research on
migration-driven diversity in two neighbourhoods in Stuttgart
(Germany) and Glasgow (United Kingdom), the book presents a concept
that takes into account the contingent and emergent nature of
social differentiation while at the same time explaining the
stability of modes of differentiation. The comparative approach
provides a nuanced analysis of how diversity in urban environments
occurs as a result of locally, socially and temporally specific
practices. In this book, Kluckmann discusses how social work, city
administration and volunteer work prefigure positions and relations
of people in the context of migration. Thus, it will appeal to
students and scholars of social and cultural anthropology, European
ethnology, sociology, human/cultural geography, cultural studies in
addition to practitioners in the fields of intercultural relations,
social and public policy as well as urban development.
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