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ID138935
Title ProperExclusionary side effects of the civic integration paradigm
Other Title Informationboundary processes among youth in Swiss schools
LanguageENG
AuthorDuemmler , Kerstin
Summary / Abstract (Note)Civic integration policies have become common in many European states and require that immigrants commit to integrating into the host society. This article draws on a study with young people in Swiss schools and investigates how these new political debates around civic integration find resonance in everyday narratives about immigration. The boundary approach is used as a framework to study the daily (re)production of the ‘Swiss–foreigner divide’. It reveals that assimilation into ‘Swiss culture’ (e.g. speak the local language and conform to social norms) remains a criterion defining who can become a legitimate member of Swiss society. Nonetheless, integration deficits are often perceived as the rule and transformed into a stigma so that ‘foreigners’ are frequently not recognised as legitimate members of society. This study indicates how the Swiss youth in this study legitimise and (re)produce exclusion and how this exclusion is embedded within past and current Swiss immigration policies.
`In' analytical NoteIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power Vol. 22, No.4; Aug 2015: p.378-396
Journal SourceIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power 2015-08 22, 4
Key WordsSwitzerland ;  Youth ;  Immigration Policy ;  Assimilation ;  Civic Integration ;  Boundary – Making