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Pathological integration, or, how East Europeans use racism to become British

Pathological integration, or, how East Europeans use racism to become British
Pathological integration, or, how East Europeans use racism to become British
East Europeans are integrating into life in the UK. This entails learning to get along with their new neighbours, but it also involves not getting along with certain neighbours. Integration is not confined to benevolent forms of everyday cosmopolitanism, multiculturalism and conviviality; it can also include more pathological forms, like racism. Whilst integration is generally seen as desirable, the learning that it entails necessarily includes less desirable practices and norms. The aim of this article is to show how East Europeans in the UK have been acquiring specifically British competencies of racism. This doesn't mean all East Europeans are racist or they always use racism; it does mean, however, that racism is a part of the integration equation. We focus on the racist and racializing practices of Poles, Hungarians and Romanians in Bristol in the UK. These East Europeans are using racism to insert themselves more favourably into Britain's racialized status hierarchies. This is a kind of integration.
Integration, Racism, Racialised hierarchies, Immigration, East Europeans
0007-1315
5-23
Fox, Jon
cd36c6fc-5287-4bcb-8bab-1f949e93d266
Mogilnicka, Magda
99b42ae0-17cf-4b08-9962-4ab607e58b13
Fox, Jon
cd36c6fc-5287-4bcb-8bab-1f949e93d266
Mogilnicka, Magda
99b42ae0-17cf-4b08-9962-4ab607e58b13

Fox, Jon and Mogilnicka, Magda (2019) Pathological integration, or, how East Europeans use racism to become British. British Journal of Sociology, 70 (1), 5-23. (doi:10.1111/1468-4446.12337).

Record type: Article

Abstract

East Europeans are integrating into life in the UK. This entails learning to get along with their new neighbours, but it also involves not getting along with certain neighbours. Integration is not confined to benevolent forms of everyday cosmopolitanism, multiculturalism and conviviality; it can also include more pathological forms, like racism. Whilst integration is generally seen as desirable, the learning that it entails necessarily includes less desirable practices and norms. The aim of this article is to show how East Europeans in the UK have been acquiring specifically British competencies of racism. This doesn't mean all East Europeans are racist or they always use racism; it does mean, however, that racism is a part of the integration equation. We focus on the racist and racializing practices of Poles, Hungarians and Romanians in Bristol in the UK. These East Europeans are using racism to insert themselves more favourably into Britain's racialized status hierarchies. This is a kind of integration.

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More information

Published date: January 2019
Keywords: Integration, Racism, Racialised hierarchies, Immigration, East Europeans

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496424
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496424
ISSN: 0007-1315
PURE UUID: 1511b281-c706-4675-b455-e99b8c1cdf38
ORCID for Magda Mogilnicka: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1258-5731

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Date deposited: 13 Dec 2024 17:33
Last modified: 14 Dec 2024 03:14

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Contributors

Author: Jon Fox
Author: Magda Mogilnicka ORCID iD

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