Fear, anxiety, and immigration in the United States and Western Europe

12 maart 2019
| | |

The 12th of March (17:00) Nancy Foner, Leo Lucassen and Jan Willem Duyvendak will provide an event on the different conception of immigration in Europa and the United States in SPUI25. You can sign up for this program for free. 

Aanmelden

The fears, reporting and political remarks about immigrant origin populations are directed differently on the two sides of the Atlantic. While the religious divide dominates the debate in Western Europe, the United States give greater prominence to race and legal status. What explains these different emphases?

In both Western Europe and the US,  fears and anxieties have arisen about immigration as the huge inflows since the end of World War II have dramatically altered the composition of the population in profound ways and created remarkable — new — ethnic, racial, and religious diversity. But if there are transatlantic similarities, tonight we shall focus on the differences. The key question: why have fears and anxieties about immigrant origin populations and their incorporation had different emphasis on the two sides of the Atlantic, with the religious divide more central in Western Europe and race and legal status especially pronounced in the U.S?

Professor Nancy Foner will give a lecture on differences between Western Europe and the US in regards to fears and anxieties about immigration. Professor Leo Lucassen will provide a response to Foner's paper. Subsequently, a Q&A will be moderated by Professor Jan Willem Duyvendak.

About the speakers

Nancy Foner is Distinguished Professor of Sociology at Hunter College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. She is the author or editor of 19 books and more than 120 articles and book chapters. Her books include the award-winning Strangers No More: Immigration and the Challenges of Integration in North America and Western Europe, written with Richard Alba (Princeton University Press, 2015), In a New Land: A Comparative View of Immigration (NYU Press, 2005), and From Ellis Island to JFK: New York's Two Great Waves of Immigration (Yale University Press, 2000). She is the recipient of numerous honors, including the 2010 Distinguished Career Award from the International Migration Section of the American Sociological Association, a Berlin Prize Fellowship at the American Academy in Berlin (2017) and John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship (2017-18).

Leo Lucassen is Director of Research of the International Institute of Social History (IISH) in Amsterdam and professor of Global Labour and Migration History at the University of Leiden. His publications include The Immigrant Threat: old and new migrants in Western Europe since 1850 (2005); Voorbij Fort Europa: een nieuwe visie op migratie (2016) and Vijf Eeuwen Migratie: een verhaal van winnaars en verliezers (2018). He also publishes regularly in Dutch national newspapers NRC, de Volkskrant, and Trouw on migration, refugees and racism.

Jan Willem Duyvendak(moderator) is Distinguished Research Professor of Sociology at the University of Amsterdam. His main fields of research currently are belonging, urban sociology, 'feeling at home' and nativism. N.B. Previously we published a review of Thuis on Athenaeum.nl.

Registration

You can sign up for this program for free. If you subscribe for the program we count on your presence. If you are unable to attend, please let us know via [email protected] | T: +31 (0)20 525 8142.

pro-mbooks1 : athenaeum