2016
DOI: 10.1080/07256868.2016.1235025
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What Is New about Dutch Populism? Dutch Colonialism, Hierarchical Citizenship and Contemporary Populist Debates and Policies in the Netherlands

Abstract: This article discusses how Dutch politics of citizenship in the (colonial) past and the present create distinctions, distribute status, rights, opportunities, securities and wealth and how they evoke agency. This process is analysed first by exploring the politics of citizenship in colonial times; second, the implications of political decolonisation for citizenship are discussed; third, present day dynamics around Dutch populism and how they connect to autochthony and Islamophobia are discussed; fourth, a pres… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…Maarten and the former Cape Colony in South Africa. Within the present-day Dutch Kingdom, there is a violent colonial construction of citizenship, which requires an analysis of who constitutes a citizen within the Dutch imaginary (see Jones, 2012Jones, , 2016. This division in the Dutch imaginary relates to the long use of the terms 'allochtoon' (meaning from elsewhere, i.e.…”
Section: 'Across the Great Divide': Articulations Of Transnational Fementioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Maarten and the former Cape Colony in South Africa. Within the present-day Dutch Kingdom, there is a violent colonial construction of citizenship, which requires an analysis of who constitutes a citizen within the Dutch imaginary (see Jones, 2012Jones, , 2016. This division in the Dutch imaginary relates to the long use of the terms 'allochtoon' (meaning from elsewhere, i.e.…”
Section: 'Across the Great Divide': Articulations Of Transnational Fementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Dutch empire comprised what is now known as Indonesia (previously referred to as the ‘Dutch East Indies’); territories in ‘the West Indies’, including Suriname; and the Caribbean Islands of Aruba, Curacao, Bonaire, Saba, St. Eustacius, St. Maarten and the former Cape Colony in South Africa. Within the present-day Dutch Kingdom, there is a violent colonial construction of citizenship, which requires an analysis of who constitutes a citizen within the Dutch imaginary (see Jones, 2012, 2016). This division in the Dutch imaginary relates to the long use of the terms ‘ allochtoon ’ (meaning from elsewhere, i.e.…”
Section: ‘Across the Great Divide’: Articulations Of Transnational Fementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Europe's nations, with their provisions of housing, jobs, and even heritage, come to be seen as owned by their white citizens. These distributions of belonging evoke Europe's colonial history and imperial ambitions and imaginations (Jones ). For nonwhite citizens, always regarded as migrants, to make claims to these goods contributes to fashioning anxiety.…”
Section: Postcolonial Europementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Europe's nations, with their provisions of housing, jobs, and even heritage, come to be seen as owned by their white citizens. These distributions of belonging evoke Europe's colonial history and imperial ambitions and imaginations (Jones 2016). For nonwhite citizens, always regarded as migrants, to make claims to these goods contributes to fashioning anxiety.…”
Section: Postcolonial Europementioning
confidence: 99%