Citizenship and Belonging: an Analysis of Immigrants’ Integration Beliefs and Membership Meaning in South-West Germany

Germany has the highest number of immigrants in Europe. Changes in immigration and citizenship laws have intended to make Germany an attractive destination for skilled immigrant workers. The accentuated focus on the economic efficiency of migration, however, leaves open the question of how Germany’...

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Main Author: Stefan Immerfall
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Milano University Press 2017-07-01
Series:Glocalism: Journal of Culture, Politics and Innovation
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs-unimi-test.4science.cloud/index.php/glocalism/article/view/21182
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author Stefan Immerfall
author_facet Stefan Immerfall
author_sort Stefan Immerfall
collection DOAJ
description Germany has the highest number of immigrants in Europe. Changes in immigration and citizenship laws have intended to make Germany an attractive destination for skilled immigrant workers. The accentuated focus on the economic efficiency of migration, however, leaves open the question of how Germany’s national identity is living up to the immigrant situation. Based on face-to-face, in-depth, semi-structured interviews (N=45), this question is probed through the eyes of first and second generation immigrants in south-west Germany. Perceptions of social and affective integration, group identifications and possibilities of de-differentiating native-immigrant distinctions are studied in detail. While a few respondents mention instances of personal discrimination and most are at ease with their life in Germany, even fewer see themselves as German without further qualification. Even though there are hints of a partial disintegration of the fault lines between immigrants’ self and what they perceive as “German”, their answers provide little indication of an emergence of a new inclusive narrative of Germaneness. Germany’s national identity still needs to broaden its understandings of “what it means to be a German”.
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spelling doaj-art-d50df76c097b483caf4662a5b5f897082025-08-20T03:06:28ZengMilano University PressGlocalism: Journal of Culture, Politics and Innovation2283-79492017-07-012Citizenship and Belonging: an Analysis of Immigrants’ Integration Beliefs and Membership Meaning in South-West GermanyStefan Immerfall 0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2657-8727University of Education Schwaebisch Gmuend Germany has the highest number of immigrants in Europe. Changes in immigration and citizenship laws have intended to make Germany an attractive destination for skilled immigrant workers. The accentuated focus on the economic efficiency of migration, however, leaves open the question of how Germany’s national identity is living up to the immigrant situation. Based on face-to-face, in-depth, semi-structured interviews (N=45), this question is probed through the eyes of first and second generation immigrants in south-west Germany. Perceptions of social and affective integration, group identifications and possibilities of de-differentiating native-immigrant distinctions are studied in detail. While a few respondents mention instances of personal discrimination and most are at ease with their life in Germany, even fewer see themselves as German without further qualification. Even though there are hints of a partial disintegration of the fault lines between immigrants’ self and what they perceive as “German”, their answers provide little indication of an emergence of a new inclusive narrative of Germaneness. Germany’s national identity still needs to broaden its understandings of “what it means to be a German”. https://ojs-unimi-test.4science.cloud/index.php/glocalism/article/view/21182MigrantsGerman IdentityBelongingSocial IntegrationBoundariesHyphenated Identity
spellingShingle Stefan Immerfall
Citizenship and Belonging: an Analysis of Immigrants’ Integration Beliefs and Membership Meaning in South-West Germany
Glocalism: Journal of Culture, Politics and Innovation
Migrants
German Identity
Belonging
Social Integration
Boundaries
Hyphenated Identity
title Citizenship and Belonging: an Analysis of Immigrants’ Integration Beliefs and Membership Meaning in South-West Germany
title_full Citizenship and Belonging: an Analysis of Immigrants’ Integration Beliefs and Membership Meaning in South-West Germany
title_fullStr Citizenship and Belonging: an Analysis of Immigrants’ Integration Beliefs and Membership Meaning in South-West Germany
title_full_unstemmed Citizenship and Belonging: an Analysis of Immigrants’ Integration Beliefs and Membership Meaning in South-West Germany
title_short Citizenship and Belonging: an Analysis of Immigrants’ Integration Beliefs and Membership Meaning in South-West Germany
title_sort citizenship and belonging an analysis of immigrants integration beliefs and membership meaning in south west germany
topic Migrants
German Identity
Belonging
Social Integration
Boundaries
Hyphenated Identity
url https://ojs-unimi-test.4science.cloud/index.php/glocalism/article/view/21182
work_keys_str_mv AT stefanimmerfall citizenshipandbelongingananalysisofimmigrantsintegrationbeliefsandmembershipmeaninginsouthwestgermany