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The role of educational institutions in the clientization of immigrants: The Swedish case
21
Citations
5
References
2000
Year
Human MigrationEthnicityMulticultural EducationEducationSocial StratificationSociology Of EducationCultural IntegrationCultural DiversityMonoculturalismLanguage StudiesMigration PolicyEuropean MonoculturalismCross-cultural IssueSwedish CaseEuropean NationsEducational InstitutionsMulticulturalismCultureSociologyCultural AnthropologyMass ImmigrationTransnational MobilityEducation PolicyMulticultural SocietiesSocial Diversity
European nations are multicultural societies. Multiculturalism is more a part of these countries' intellectual debates, however, than part of their policies and practices. The public and governmental sectors of Europe still remain monocultural. Monoculturalism, which entails the cultural hegemony of the ‘white majority’ of European societies over ‘other’ cultural groups, is a part of the systematic reproduction of an established social order. Formal education is an important means of reproduction of the monocultural order. European monoculturalism is based on an ethnocentrism that has a long tradition in the Western worldview and is institutionalized in its political, judicial, educational and bureaucratic systems. Western monoculturalism has become increasingly problematic in the face of growing multiculturalism in Europe and jeopardizes the existing social order. The integration of diverse immigrant groups into the host societies is not compatible with the reproduction of Western cultural hegemony, a hegemony through which the policy of integration is simply reduced to a political goal that limits immigrants' action to that of adjusting themselves to objective norms and rules. Monoculturally educated groups, who are supposed to help immigrants become integrated into such societies, paradoxically construct obstacles to their integration.
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