izpis_h1_title_alt

Primerjalna analiza percepcije groženj, povezanih s priseljevanjem, v Združenem kraljestvu in Nemčiji kot državama s civilno in etnično nacionalno identiteto
ID Ristevska, Teodora Tea (Author), ID Bojinović Fenko, Ana (Mentor) More about this mentor... This link opens in a new window, ID Uhan, Samo (Co-mentor)

.pdfPDF - Presentation file, Download (543,84 KB)
MD5: 49A196BA4BCD65842891FB6CBCA4FC3B

Abstract
Ta naloga je preučila odnos ljudi do priseljevanja in jih poskušala povezati z državljansko in etnično identiteto svoje države, s posebnim poudarkom na primerih Združenega kraljestva oziroma Nemčije. Izhodiščna točka analize je bila verjetnost korelacije med dvema sprejemljivkama, in sicer naj bi zaznane grožnje priseljencem bile v medsebojni odvisnosti z državljansko in etnično nacionalno identiteto. Državljanska nacionalna identiteta bi naj bila povezana s pozitivnim dojemanjem grožnje priseljevanja in negativno dojemanje groženj priseljevanja je bilo pričakovano v primeru etnične nacionalne identitete. Ugotovitve te naloge kažejo, da korelacija ni linearna. Pričakovanja, da Britanci dojemajo priseljence kot manjšo grožnjo kot Nemci, so bila ovržena, saj podrobna analiza podatkov kaže, da imajo Nemci bolj pozitivne odnose do priseljencev. Poleg tega rezultati kažejo na to, da se je zakonito priseljevanje povečalo po nekaterih spremembah v politiki priseljevanja Nemčije in Združenega kraljestva. V tej nalogi je bila opravljena podrobna analiza, ki vključuje realno, simbolno in socialno grožnjo. V vseh izmed teh so nemški anketiranci, v primerjavi z britanskimi, bolj tolerantni do priseljencev. To nas pripelje do zaključka, da bi morali koncept državljanske in etnične nacionalne identitete znova obravnavati. Ob upoštevanju novih empiričnih ugotovitev, bi bilo treba slednje preoblikovati.

Language:Slovenian
Keywords:priseljevanje, percepcija groženj, nacionalna identiteta, Nemčija, Združeno kraljestvo.
Work type:Master's thesis/paper
Organization:FDV - Faculty of Social Sciences
Year:2018
PID:20.500.12556/RUL-102529 This link opens in a new window
COBISS.SI-ID:35774813 This link opens in a new window
Publication date in RUL:01.09.2018
Views:1198
Downloads:439
Metadata:XML RDF-CHPDL DC-XML DC-RDF
:
Copy citation
Share:Bookmark and Share

Secondary language

Language:English
Title:A comparative analysis of immigration-related threat perception in the United Kingdom and Germany as civic and ethnic national identity states
Abstract:
The thesis has examined people’s attitudes towards immigration, aiming to relate them to the civic or ethnic national identity of their state; with particular focus on the cases of the UK and Germany, respectively. The starting point of the analysis was the probability of correlation between the two variables, namely the perceived threats towards immigrants were expected to correlate to the civic and ethnic national identity. Civic national identity was supposed to be linked with positive immigration threat perception and negative immigration threat perception was anticipated in the case of ethnic national identity. The findings of this dissertation suggest that the correlation is not linear. The expectations that the British perceive immigrants as a lesser threat than the Germans are rejected, given the detailed data analysis which shows that the Germans have a more positive attitude towards immigrants. Moreover, the results point towards the idea that legal immigration has increased after some changes in the immigration policies of Germany and the UK. In this paper, a detailed analysis that includes realistic, symbolic and social threat was made. In all of them, German respondents are more tolerant towards immigrants compared to British. This leads us to the conclusion that the concept of civic and ethnic national identity should be reconsidered. Having in mind these new empirical findings, the latter should be reformulated.

Keywords:immigration, threat perception, national identity, Germany, United Kingdom.

Similar documents

Similar works from RUL:
Similar works from other Slovenian collections:

Back