Publication | Closed Access
The Limits of European-Ness: Immigrant Women in Fortress Europe
118
Citations
20
References
1997
Year
Human MigrationEthnicityWomen's RightEuropean LawNationalismEuropean Legal HistoryEuropean Union LawSocial SciencesGender StudiesTransnational FeminismsMigration PolicyNew EuropePolitical FormationEuropean Community LawFortress EuropeIntersectionalityEuropean CitizenshipFeminist Political TheoryEuropean IssueFeminist TheoryCultureTransnational MobilityArtsSocial Justice
This article is intended to contribute to the ongoing debate on the ideological, social and political formation of a New Europe. By focusing on the position of immigrant women it examines the gendered nature of the changing configurations of cultural and social European landscapes. Two features of immigrant women's positioning are the key issues of this analysis: regulations through national and European law and ideological representation. It is argued that the debate on European citizenship should be closely linked to the question of formal and substantive and also of symbolic rights. Moreover, feminists, when using the concept of difference in this context, should be aware of the power structures underlying differentiated social positions in society. European-ness will lose its exclusive character only if it provides a solid place in the symbolic order of Europe for immigrants.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1