Citizenship and immigration in post-war Britain : the institutional origins of a multicultural nation
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Citizenship and immigration in post-war Britain : the institutional origins of a multicultural nation
Oxford University Press, 2000
- : hbk
- : pbk
Available at / 22 libraries
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: pbkEWUK||325.2||C117307216
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Note
Bibliography: p. [269]-286
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The author draws extensively on archival material and theortical advances in the social sciences literature on citizenship and migration to examine the UK's transformation, since 1945, from a homogeneous into a multicultural society. Rejecting a dominant strain of sociological and historical inquiry emphasizing state racism, Hansen argues that politicians and civil servants were overall liberal, relative to a public to which it owed its office, and pursued policies that were rational for any liberal democratic politician. He explains the trajectory of British migration and nationality policy - its exceptional liberality until the 1950s, its exceptional restrictiveness after then, and its tortured and seemingly racist definition of citizenship. The combined effect of a 1948 imperial definition of citizenship (adopted independently of immigration) and a primary commitment to migration from the Old Dominions, locked British politicians into a series of policy choices resulting in a migration and nationality regime that was not racist in intention, but was racist in effect.
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