Description
Book SynopsisGerman migration policy now stands at a major crossroad, caught between a fifty-year history of missed opportunities and serious new challenges. Focusing on these new challenges that German policy makers face, the authors, both internationally recognized in this field, use historical argument, theoretical analysis, and empirical evaluation...
Trade Review “To produce a book as thorough and useful as this one represents a major achievement. Anyone wanting an introduction to immigration in the Federal Republic should start with Klusmeyer and Papademetriou.” · European History Quarterly
“By providing an up-to-date account, this book fills a need and should be of interest to scholars, policy researchers, and students… I recommend this book as a very helpful overview of a policy area that has changed rapidly.” · German Studies Review
“The authors are two of the most innovative and refreshing thinkers on migration and integration policy worldwide. What makes this book extraordinary is its nuanced evaluation of historical and contemporary migration policies, including all the ambivalence and contradictions that have accompanied these policy debates in Germany. The book also distills the positive paradigm of change that has recently emerged; it identifies new opportunities and unsolved challenges in German migration and integration policies. With this book, the authors have made a timely and very important contribution to understanding the root causes and key challenges to immigration reform in the Federal Republic of Germany.” · Rita Süssmuth, Chair of the EU High Level Group on “Social Integration of Ethnic Minorities and their full Participation in the Labor Market,” former Chair of Germany’s Independent Immigration Commission, and former President of the German Federal Parliament.
"...[T]he most authoritative and comprehensive study ever written on German immigration, citizenship and asylum policies. It offers a fresh view on well and less well known facts interpreted and put into perspective by two well known scholars of international migration policy." · Rainer Münz, Senior Fellow at the Hamburg Institute of International Economics
“This masterful, comprehensive, and incisive book lets us know how the largest and richest country in Europe has struggled to balance its commitment to its national character with the inevitability of migration-driven change. It is the definitive analysis of this vexing policy arena in Germany.” · John Mollenkopf, Director, Center for Urban Research & Distinguished Professor, Political Science and Sociology, CUNY
“This is a very timely and important book, and will provide immigration scholars on both sides of the Atlantic a clear understanding of developments related to immigration and integration policy in Germany. The authors’ pragmatic and critical approach addresses the years that Germany spent in denial of its status as a country of immigration and the impact this had on policy development. Germany is a key player in the European Union, and developments there will deeply impact developments related to immigration policy at the EU level.” · Terri E. Givens, Associate Professor, University of Texas at Austin
Table of Contents List of Tables and Figures
Acknowledgments
Introduction
PART I: MEMBERSHIP AND THE BASIC LAW
Chapter 1. The International Dimension
Chapter 2. The Federalist Dimension
Chapter 3. The Civic/Political Dimension
Chapter 4. The Social Dimension
Chapter 5. The Ethnonational Dimension
Chapter 6. Debating Concepts of National Membership
Chapter 7. Integration, National Identity, and the Quest for Homogeneity
PART II: LAYING THE FOUNDATION FOR MANAGING MIGRATION, 1949–1990
Chapter 8. The Descent of the Aussiedler and the Politics of the German Diaspora
Chapter 9. The Federal Republic as German Homeland
Chapter 10. A Tradition of Imported Labor
Chapter 11. Between Retreat and Reform: Naturalization Laws and the Challenge of Integration
Chapter 12. Aliens Policy and the Federal Courts
Chapter 13. The FRG’s International Refugee Challenge
Chapter 14. Reunification: Triumph and Tragedy
PART III: GERMANY INSIDE THE EUROPEAN UNION
Chapter 15. Reforming the Frameworks: The Maastricht Treaty and The Basic Law
Chapter 16. The Regulation of Asylum
Chapter 17. Rethinking Legacies: The New Aussiedler Policy
Chapter 18. Jewish Immigration: Contesting and Confirming Germany’s Policies toward Immigrants
Chapter 19. Reforming German Citizenship Law
Chapter 20. Bilateral Agreements
Chapter 21. Temporary Labor Migration Programs
Chapter 22. The Amsterdam Treaty and the Emergent EU Migration Policy
PART IV: GERMANY FACES THE FUTURE: NEW INITIATIVES, OLD HABITS
Chapter 23. Green Cards and Leitkultur
Chapter 24. Germany’s and Europe’s Demographic Dilemmas
Chapter 25. Embracing Immigration: Laying the Foundation for a New Policy
Chapter 26. From Policy Vision to Legislative Reality: The Making of the 2005 Migration Law
Chapter 27. Integration and the Migration law
Conclusion: Negotiating Difference and Belonging in Today’s Germany
Selected Bibliography
Index