Germany for the Germans? : the political effects of international migration

Bibliographic Information

Germany for the Germans? : the political effects of international migration

Wesley D. Chapin

(Contributions in political science, no. 381)

Greenwood Press, 1997

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [145]-167) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Migration's impact on German society has been dramatic. Indeed, key political events in modern German history cannot be fully understood without reference to migration's influence. Domestic and international affairs were greatly affected by the millions of ethnic Germans who were either expelled from the homelands or arrived as refugees during and after the Second World War. The construction (and later the fall) of the Berlin Wall would not have occurred without the massive emigration of refugees from the German Democratic Republic. And without the Wall, there would have been less reason for the recruitment of millions of non-German guestworkers. Their presence, along with the massive influx of asylum seekers, has lately fueled the anger of the New Right. The continued presence, then, of a large, permanent, and unintegrated foreign population; escalating violence between foreign groups; and the lack of a comprehensive migration policy assure that immigration will remain a key issue in German, and hence, European politics. This study will be of interest to scholars in comparative politics, international relations, migration, and European studies.

Table of Contents

Introduction Abbreviations Germany, A Land of Immigration The Political Effects of German Migration to Germany The Development of the "Foreigner Problem" "Foreign" Migration and Electoral Support for the New Right Violence, the New Right, and the Reactions of the Established Parties Migration's Future Potential as a Political Issue Appendix References Index

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