2014
DOI: 10.5117/cms2014.1.bau2
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Re-Imagining the Nation

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Cited by 18 publications
(14 citation statements)
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References 28 publications
(26 reference statements)
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“…Although Tuck and Yang (2012) categorize racialized immigrants as new settlers, there is a more nuanced aspect of immigration socio-political frameworks at work that Bauder (2011Bauder ( , 2014 observes. Bauder asserts that contemporary public discussions on immigration do not recognize Indigenous presence and distinguish between already-immigrated settlers who are mostly of White/European descent and more diverse, new immigrants predominantly from the Global South.…”
Section: Indigeneity and Immigration: A Discursive And Practical Separationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although Tuck and Yang (2012) categorize racialized immigrants as new settlers, there is a more nuanced aspect of immigration socio-political frameworks at work that Bauder (2011Bauder ( , 2014 observes. Bauder asserts that contemporary public discussions on immigration do not recognize Indigenous presence and distinguish between already-immigrated settlers who are mostly of White/European descent and more diverse, new immigrants predominantly from the Global South.…”
Section: Indigeneity and Immigration: A Discursive And Practical Separationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The ensuing debate over the points system became an expression of the political process of coming to terms with Germany's immigration reality (interviews, think tank and research institute policy experts). Specifically, it activated long-smoldering concerns about immigration and its impact on Germany, providing fertile ground for a wider public debate about immigrant integration (Bauder 2013;Schönwälder 2013). This was so, not least because the German government had long eschewed an active immigrant integration policy even as issues of immigrant integration started to gain greater public salience throughout the 1990s and early 2000s (Heckmann 2003).…”
Section: Germany's Immigration Act (2005): One Step Forward Two Stepmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Germany's sense of national identity (Bauder 2013). Despite active engagement in the policy process, pro-liberalization employer associations were not able to effectively counter the debate's political framing as a question of immigrant integration, rather than market priorities (Schönwälder 2013, 283).…”
Section: Germany's Immigration Act (2005): One Step Forward Two Stepmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite the various inequalities or exploitations of a society, the national imaginary structures the state and its citizens as horizontally-oriented and as a cohesive whole (Anderson 2014). Thus, the concept ambiguously defines a state's image relative to its citizens, government, and other nations (Bauder 2014).…”
Section: Traditional and Critical Multiculturalismmentioning
confidence: 99%