Immigrant NationsISBN: 978-0-7456-4962-7
Paperback
300 pages
June 2011, Polity
|
Financial Times
'With Immigrant Nations, Scheffer offers an extension of
his earlier arguments and an answer to his critics ... essential
reading for anyone with an interest in the issue.'
Times
Higher Education
'Arguably the best study in many years of the effects that mass
immigration has had on the countries and cities of western Europe
and north America.'
European
Voice
'Should be required reading for those engaged with this
important issue.'
Foreign
Affairs
'With major cities as focal points, Scheffer argues for a
revision of both how we look at our legislative and cultural
relationship with immigration by way of revisiting historical
precedents as well as considering the profoundly different (more
densely populated and globalized) world in which we live
today.'
Pop
Matters
'The breadth of this study is formidable. Exploring as it does
the history of voluntary or forced emigration and immigration,
slavery and the US and the problems of assimilation, it covers a
number of controversial bases in a non-sensationalist way. The
recurring subject of large and diverse Muslim communities in
European cities is the most significant theme of this book and it's
an issue which is tackled with courage and honesty.'
Morning
Star
'Scheffer tackles the problems resulting from immigration into
Europe with a candid critique of antiforeign sentiments and the
feelings of immigrant populations as well ... Highly
recommended.'
Choice
'An honest and vivid exploration of the many issues that
contemporary immigration presents for European societies ... proof
that the immigration debate can and should be moved beyond its
current impasse.'
Survival: Global Politics and Strategy
‘Paul Scheffer has written the most acute, sensitive and
nuanced account there is of Europe's new immigrants. This book is
essential reading for anyone who wishes to understand today's
Europe.'
Timothy Garton Ash, St Antony's College, Oxford
‘Paul Scheffer handles a combustible subject with uncommon
restraint. His tone is sharp yet compassionate; his scope is broad
yet detailed; he is an insider yet unobtrusive. In a subtle way he
reveals the layers of painful contradictions that plague a people
who for decades cultivated a self-image of tolerance and freedom,
only to be cast into self-doubt as that image is tested by the
arrival and settlement of Muslim immigrants.'
Ayaan Hirsi Ali, American Enterprise Institute
‘A vital contribution to the current discussions in Europe
on the problems of immigration. Scheffer's voice is urgent, timely
and penetrating. This book should be read by all Europeans, and
indeed by all people, who are interested in one of the most
pressing issues of our time: how to integrate non-Western
immigrants, especially immigrants with Muslim backgrounds, into
Western societies.'
Ian Buruma, Bard College