HS 18_18 will be with Nancy Foner, an outstanding migration scholar and a Distinguished Professor of Sociology at the City University of New York.
The seminar will take place at the Dpt. of Sociology, UniTrento, next Tuesday, May 8 at 4pm. See abstract below. All welcome!
Drawing on an analysis of immigrant and second generation integration in the United States, Britain, France, Germany, and the Netherlands, this talk focuses on issues of belonging among the second generation children of immigrants, and on the links between feeling at home and issues of national identity on both sides of the Atlantic. Whether the second generation children of immigrants feel at home in the countries where they live is bound up with how they are viewed by those in the native majority population. They have been born and raised in the country where their immigrant parents moved — so this country is home in this sense. But do they feel they belong? To what degree do they really feel at home? Do they see themselves as included in the broader national identity? Are the second generation children of immigrants considered American, for example, or German or Dutch? A key issue throughout is analyzing why the US seems to be more comfortable with extending a national identity to the second generation than the Western European countries.