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From 'Gastarbeiter' to European Expatriates
Details
The Gastarbeiter (guest worker) agreement between Greece and Germany in 1960 sparked the biggest wave of emigration to central Europe in the history of the modern Greek state. This book examines the impact of this agreement on Greek migrants, partcularly in relation to the role that their social and cultural background played in integration.
The Gastarbeiter (guest worker) agreement between Greece and Germany in March 1960 sparked the biggest wave of emigration to central Europe in the history of the modern Greek state. Greece achieved its full European Economic Community (ECC) membership in May 1979 and, in the years that followed, the guest workers became European expatriates, particularly so after the 1992 Maastricht Treaty that created the European Union (EU).
This book examines two different intra-European regimes in relation to the Greek migrant communities of Germany: that of guest worker recruitment, and that of European expatriation, a bloc actor policy that transformed the previous bilateral migratory framework. By extension, this book engages in a comparison of two different ages of European unification, while at the same time examining the role that the social and cultural background of Greek migrants has played as a variable of integration.
Autorentext
Eleni Tseligka holds a PhD in Intraeuropean Migration from Staffordshire University, where she also worked as a lecturer in politics. Her research interests focus on diasporas, migration and EU migration policies, religion and identity-related issues, nationalism and the European public sphere. She is a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy in the UK, an International Associate of the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion, a member of the editorial board for the Cogent Arts & Humanities and a peer reviewer for the International Migration Journal. She is currently teaching politics and international relations at Aston University.
Klappentext
The Gastarbeiter (guest worker) agreement between Greece and Germany in March 1960 sparked the biggest wave of emigration to central Europe in the history of the modern Greek state. Greece achieved its full European Economic Community (ECC) membership in May 1979 and, in the years that followed, the guest workers became European expatriates, particularly so after the 1992 Maastricht Treaty that created the European Union (EU). This book examines two different intra-European regimes in relation to the Greek migrant communities of Germany: that of guest worker recruitment, and that of European expatriation, a bloc actor policy that transformed the previous bilateral migratory framework. By extension, this book engages in a comparison of two different ages of European unification, while at the same time examining the role that the social and cultural background of Greek migrants has played as a variable of integration.
Inhalt
CONTENTS: Aspects of European unification The background of Greek Gastarbeiter migration The first twenty years from arrival to settlement: 19601980 The village, the Church and the Greek communities Integration and Europeanisation Disintegration and re-marginalisation
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- Sprache Englisch
- Anzahl Seiten 254
- Herausgeber Peter Lang
- Gewicht 374g
- Untertitel Greek Migrant Communities in Germany and their Socio-political Integration
- Autor Eleni Tseligka
- Titel From 'Gastarbeiter' to European Expatriates
- Veröffentlichung 06.12.2019
- ISBN 1788745604
- Format Kartonierter Einband
- EAN 9781788745604
- Jahr 2019
- Größe H229mm x B152mm x T14mm
- Lesemotiv Verstehen
- Auflage 1. Auflage
- GTIN 09781788745604