Beyond Binaries and Polarization?: Rethinking Pluralist Inclusion in Immigrant Nations

This book explores what lies between the statuses of insider and outsider in immigrant nations. It asks: Who is conditionally included/excluded in relation to whom, and for what reasons? What does this conditional inclusion/exclusion entail in terms of citizenship, material resources, and sense of belonging? How does it affect the cultural and economic well-being of refugees, migrants and the host society? The focus is on Canada, which is often described as the quintessential immigrant nation.

The chapters in this book provide new insights into several hotly contested issues: the overlapping cultural and economic logics of nationalist inclusion/exclusion, the growing prevalence of temporary and two-step migration regimes, the importance of cities in managing multiculturalism, the need to disaggregate minority groups, and the intersections of race, class and gender in narratives of nationhood. By shifting the focus of research from us/them binaries to the study of relational inclusion/exclusion involving three or more actors or groups, this book highlights the often-overlooked conditionality and temporality of immigrant inclusion, the messiness of policies aimed at ethnic diversity, and the uneven distribution of attitudes among members of minority groups.

This book will be valuable for scholars, students, and policymakers in the fields of sociology, political science, migration studies, and Canadian studies.

The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Nationalism and Ethnic Politics and are accompanied with a new Foreword, a comprehensive glossary, and critical engagement questions.

1146982649
Beyond Binaries and Polarization?: Rethinking Pluralist Inclusion in Immigrant Nations

This book explores what lies between the statuses of insider and outsider in immigrant nations. It asks: Who is conditionally included/excluded in relation to whom, and for what reasons? What does this conditional inclusion/exclusion entail in terms of citizenship, material resources, and sense of belonging? How does it affect the cultural and economic well-being of refugees, migrants and the host society? The focus is on Canada, which is often described as the quintessential immigrant nation.

The chapters in this book provide new insights into several hotly contested issues: the overlapping cultural and economic logics of nationalist inclusion/exclusion, the growing prevalence of temporary and two-step migration regimes, the importance of cities in managing multiculturalism, the need to disaggregate minority groups, and the intersections of race, class and gender in narratives of nationhood. By shifting the focus of research from us/them binaries to the study of relational inclusion/exclusion involving three or more actors or groups, this book highlights the often-overlooked conditionality and temporality of immigrant inclusion, the messiness of policies aimed at ethnic diversity, and the uneven distribution of attitudes among members of minority groups.

This book will be valuable for scholars, students, and policymakers in the fields of sociology, political science, migration studies, and Canadian studies.

The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Nationalism and Ethnic Politics and are accompanied with a new Foreword, a comprehensive glossary, and critical engagement questions.

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Beyond Binaries and Polarization?: Rethinking Pluralist Inclusion in Immigrant Nations

Beyond Binaries and Polarization?: Rethinking Pluralist Inclusion in Immigrant Nations

Beyond Binaries and Polarization?: Rethinking Pluralist Inclusion in Immigrant Nations

Beyond Binaries and Polarization?: Rethinking Pluralist Inclusion in Immigrant Nations

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Overview

This book explores what lies between the statuses of insider and outsider in immigrant nations. It asks: Who is conditionally included/excluded in relation to whom, and for what reasons? What does this conditional inclusion/exclusion entail in terms of citizenship, material resources, and sense of belonging? How does it affect the cultural and economic well-being of refugees, migrants and the host society? The focus is on Canada, which is often described as the quintessential immigrant nation.

The chapters in this book provide new insights into several hotly contested issues: the overlapping cultural and economic logics of nationalist inclusion/exclusion, the growing prevalence of temporary and two-step migration regimes, the importance of cities in managing multiculturalism, the need to disaggregate minority groups, and the intersections of race, class and gender in narratives of nationhood. By shifting the focus of research from us/them binaries to the study of relational inclusion/exclusion involving three or more actors or groups, this book highlights the often-overlooked conditionality and temporality of immigrant inclusion, the messiness of policies aimed at ethnic diversity, and the uneven distribution of attitudes among members of minority groups.

This book will be valuable for scholars, students, and policymakers in the fields of sociology, political science, migration studies, and Canadian studies.

The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Nationalism and Ethnic Politics and are accompanied with a new Foreword, a comprehensive glossary, and critical engagement questions.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781040392058
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 06/30/2025
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 142
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Elke Winter is Professor of Sociology at the bilingual University of Ottawa/ Université d’Ottawa, Canada. A fellow of the Royal Society of Canada’s College of New Scholars, Artists and Scientists and the German Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, she recently served as Harvard University’s William Lyon Mackenzie King Chair for Canadian Studies.

Table of Contents

Foreword Introduction: Beyond Binaries and Polarization? Rethinking Pluralist Inclusion in Immigrant Nations 1. Conservatism and the Re-Communitarianization of Citizenship in Canada 2. Staggered Inclusion: Between Temporary and Permanent Immigration Status in Quebec, Canada 3. The Paradox of Pluralism: Municipal Integration Policy in Québec 4. A Diverse Minority of Intolerance: Ethnic Relations in a Multicultural Society 5. Hailing in the Face of Covid-19: On the Uses and Abuses of Heroism Afterword: The Value of Normative Models for Understanding Pluralism

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