1. Immigration Policies and Muslim Immigrants: A Comparative Analysis of the Netherlands, Germany, France and the UK.
- Author
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Duncan, Natasha T. and Tatari, Eren
- Subjects
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IMMIGRATION policy , *MUSLIMS , *COMPARATIVE studies , *SEPTEMBER 11 Terrorist Attacks, 2001 , *NATIONAL security - Abstract
Immigration policies serve a number of functions for states. Governments may use policies as instruments of foreign policy, economic growth, population growth, and/or national security. In this post-September 11, 2001 global environment, integration policies have become more assimilationist and immigration restrictions toward nationals from Muslim countries of origin have increased in the name of national security. While this trend is common among many Western states, Britain's immigration stance toward Muslim migrants remains unchanged. What explains the radical reforms in the Netherlands, Germany, and France while British immigration policy remained unchanged? This study examines change in immigration policies in Netherlands, Germany, France, and the absence of this change in the UK, towards migrants from predominantly Muslim countries of origin. Based on a comparative case study analysis using process tracing, findings indicate that Dutch immigration/integration policy choices influence government policy changes in other West European countries. Governments experiencing similar sociopolitical 'problems' and observe overlapping societal responses to them, optimize in creating policy alternatives by using short-cuts and adopting policies implemented in comparable states and situations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011