Abstract
The reason Europe has difficulties accepting large-scale immigration and ethnic diversity should be sought in the basic structure of European nationalism and is not a phenomenon easily dealt with through good will or institutional reform. Simultaneously, populism and other forms of anti-elitism go hand in hand with increasing international interdependence; the business world and politics are moving apart; and the EU is trapped between nearly irreconcilable paradoxes. I outline a number of these dichotomies while finally looking at what needs to be done to close the widening gap between nationalism, European integration and migration-based diversity.
Originalsprog | Dansk |
---|---|
Tidsskrift | National Identities |
ISSN | 1460-8944 |
DOI | |
Status | Udgivet - 8 aug. 2019 |