“There's just too many”: The construction of immigration as a social problem

J. Pattison
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Abstract This article presents findings collected in 2016–2017 from a multi‐method ethnographic study of Shirebrook, Derbyshire in the English East Midlands, examining the narratives used by the local authority (LA) and local residents that construct immigration as a social problem. In doing so, it contributes to the literature on race and migration by extending analysis beyond metropolitan localities with long histories of multi‐ethnic settlement, to consider a relatively small, peripheral former colliery town. The paper demonstrates how migration is framed as a social problem by central government funding streams with consequences for localities, and the influence this has on local narratives of social change. The construction of immigration as a social problem is rooted in the constraints of austerity and longer‐term processes of deindustrialization and economic restructuring, with representations and understandings of place being constitutive of anti‐immigrant sentiment. This article deepens our understanding of responses to immigration in the UK, and has broader implications for understanding the relationship between place, state polices and local narratives.
“实在是太多了”:将移民建构为一个社会问题
本文介绍了2016-2017年在英国东米德兰兹郡德比郡希尔布鲁克进行的一项多方法民族志研究的结果,研究了地方当局(LA)和当地居民将移民构建为一个社会问题的叙述。在这样做的过程中,它通过将分析扩展到具有悠久多民族定居历史的大都市地区之外,来考虑一个相对较小的边缘前煤矿城镇,从而为种族和移民文献做出了贡献。本文展示了移民如何被中央政府资金流视为一个社会问题,并对地方产生影响,以及这对地方社会变革叙事的影响。移民作为一个社会问题的构建根植于紧缩政策的约束以及去工业化和经济重组的长期过程,对地方的表达和理解构成了反移民情绪。本文加深了我们对英国移民反应的理解,并对理解地方、国家政策和地方叙事之间的关系具有更广泛的意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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