Quaderni di Sociologia (Mar 2007)
Immigrazione e conflitti urbani in Europa
Abstract
Immigration has introduced serious conflicts into European urban areas. The nature of these conflicts varies according to many factors: the countries of origin of immigrants, their cultural and religious heritage, the social and economic problems in the hosting countries. But it is also necessary to take into account the political culture of these countries, i.e. the way in which State, people and nation are regarded and the relationships between ethnicity, nationality and citizenship are conceived. It is not by chance that France has adopted a policy of integration through cultural assimilation, the United Kingdom has practised a form of uneven pluralism emphasizing the role of ethnic communities and Germany has preferred a rotatory presence of «guest workers». Yet, all of these policies have failed owing to the important changes that have occurred both in the global context and in immigration itself. This paper analyzes what has happened in recent decades by taking into account the urban riots in England since the late ’50s, the xenophobic attacks on immigrants in Germany after its reunification and the recurrent explosions in the French banlieues since the late ’70s until the resounding events of November 2005. The last part concerns the case of Italy, which is still virtually unknown abroad.