2017
DOI: 10.1353/phi.2017.0021
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Mapping the Margins of Europe: Race, Migration, and Belonging

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The presentism marking the frameworks of crisis often deployed to make sense of people's decision to vote for right‐wing parties risks overlooking historically rooted patterns of xenophobia. The Black Lives Matters movement's repeated calls to acknowledge the presence of systemic racism – echoed by the recent turn towards decolonization across the social sciences – is a critical reminder that scholars attempting to make sense of the current reactionary backlash cannot ignore the historically engrained racial hierarchies and supremacist imaginaries underlying its success (Czajka & Suchland, 2018). In this vein, Pasieka (2019: 5) stresses that there is enough evidence from social science research to suggest that ‘we have never been tolerant’ and that hence we need more sophisticated analyses of the success of the right.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The presentism marking the frameworks of crisis often deployed to make sense of people's decision to vote for right‐wing parties risks overlooking historically rooted patterns of xenophobia. The Black Lives Matters movement's repeated calls to acknowledge the presence of systemic racism – echoed by the recent turn towards decolonization across the social sciences – is a critical reminder that scholars attempting to make sense of the current reactionary backlash cannot ignore the historically engrained racial hierarchies and supremacist imaginaries underlying its success (Czajka & Suchland, 2018). In this vein, Pasieka (2019: 5) stresses that there is enough evidence from social science research to suggest that ‘we have never been tolerant’ and that hence we need more sophisticated analyses of the success of the right.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%