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Table of Contents
Foreword; Contents; Contributors; Chapter-1; Identity and Migration: An Introduction; 1.1 Identity Construction and Transformation in Migration Processes; 1.2 Synopsis of the Chapters; 1.3 Conclusions; References; Part I; Identity and Cultural Diversity: Conceptual Entanglements; Toward a New Lexicon and a Conceptual Grammar to Understand the "Multicultural Issue"; Chapter-2; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 The Contemporary Socio-Cultural Context and the Identitarian Dimension; 2.3 The "Multicultural Issue" Closely Considered; 2.4 Political-Institutional Consequences and Theoretical Perspectives
2.5 Towards a "Polydimensional and Cognitive Multiculturalism"2.6 Conclusion; References; Chapter-3; Negotiation of Identities and Negotiation of Values in Multicultural Societies; References; Part II; Identity and Marginalization: Migrants as the Other; Has Multiculturalism Failed in Europe? Migration Policies, State of Emergency, and Their Impact on Migrants' Identities in Italy; Chapter-4; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Multiethnic Societies; 4.3 The Anomalous Identity of the Stranger: Neither Friend nor Enemy; 4.4 The Erased Identity of the Exiled; 4.5 Italian Migration Policies
4.6 Migration Policies in Italy in the Season of Humanitarian Emergencies: Between Compassion and Reason4.7 The Rights and Duties of Migrants; 4.8 The Debate on the Failure of Multiculturalism in Europe; 4.9 Conclusions; References; Chapter-5; Intersectional Constructions of (Non-)Belonging in a Transnational Context: Biographical Narratives of Muslim Migrant Women in Germany; 5.1 Hegemonic Constructions of Migrant Muslim Women's Identity in the European Context; 5.2 Three Biographical Narratives in Comparison: Life Stories of Moroccan, Turkish, and Kurdish Migrant Women; 5.2.1 Dilara
5.2.2 Asiye5.2.3 Samira; 5.3 Concluding Remarks: Towards the Intersectional-hybrid Notion of Identity and Culture in the Transnational Migration Context; References; Part III; Identity and Rights: How Law Shapes Identity; Chapter-6; The Self and the Other in Post-modern European Societies; 6.1 Introduction; 6.2 The Concept of Identity; 6.3 Informal and Formal Identity Building Processes; 6.4 A Draft of the Genealogy of Modern Identity; 6.5 The Dialectics of Self and Other in our Conceptual Structures; 6.6 Human Rights as a Moral Source; 6.7 Aporias of the European Human Rights Norms
6.8 Immigration and Otherness6.9 Conclusions; References; Chapter-7; Processes of Constructing and Deconstructing Gender Identities in Contemporary Migrations; 7.1 Introduction; 7.2 The Invisible Frontier; 7.3 Manipulated Identities; 7.4 Performative Gender: Socially Negotiated Identities and Strategies of "Feminization"; 7.5 A New Lexicon for Questioning Gender Categories: Cahllenging the Heteronormativity; 7.6 Toward a LGBTIQWA Movement
2.5 Towards a "Polydimensional and Cognitive Multiculturalism"2.6 Conclusion; References; Chapter-3; Negotiation of Identities and Negotiation of Values in Multicultural Societies; References; Part II; Identity and Marginalization: Migrants as the Other; Has Multiculturalism Failed in Europe? Migration Policies, State of Emergency, and Their Impact on Migrants' Identities in Italy; Chapter-4; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Multiethnic Societies; 4.3 The Anomalous Identity of the Stranger: Neither Friend nor Enemy; 4.4 The Erased Identity of the Exiled; 4.5 Italian Migration Policies
4.6 Migration Policies in Italy in the Season of Humanitarian Emergencies: Between Compassion and Reason4.7 The Rights and Duties of Migrants; 4.8 The Debate on the Failure of Multiculturalism in Europe; 4.9 Conclusions; References; Chapter-5; Intersectional Constructions of (Non-)Belonging in a Transnational Context: Biographical Narratives of Muslim Migrant Women in Germany; 5.1 Hegemonic Constructions of Migrant Muslim Women's Identity in the European Context; 5.2 Three Biographical Narratives in Comparison: Life Stories of Moroccan, Turkish, and Kurdish Migrant Women; 5.2.1 Dilara
5.2.2 Asiye5.2.3 Samira; 5.3 Concluding Remarks: Towards the Intersectional-hybrid Notion of Identity and Culture in the Transnational Migration Context; References; Part III; Identity and Rights: How Law Shapes Identity; Chapter-6; The Self and the Other in Post-modern European Societies; 6.1 Introduction; 6.2 The Concept of Identity; 6.3 Informal and Formal Identity Building Processes; 6.4 A Draft of the Genealogy of Modern Identity; 6.5 The Dialectics of Self and Other in our Conceptual Structures; 6.6 Human Rights as a Moral Source; 6.7 Aporias of the European Human Rights Norms
6.8 Immigration and Otherness6.9 Conclusions; References; Chapter-7; Processes of Constructing and Deconstructing Gender Identities in Contemporary Migrations; 7.1 Introduction; 7.2 The Invisible Frontier; 7.3 Manipulated Identities; 7.4 Performative Gender: Socially Negotiated Identities and Strategies of "Feminization"; 7.5 A New Lexicon for Questioning Gender Categories: Cahllenging the Heteronormativity; 7.6 Toward a LGBTIQWA Movement