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reflect the racialized cultural hierarchies of colonialism and empire (Boatcă 2015). At the heart of this construction lies what can be thought of as the linear conception of population movement, in which a select few designated but heavily symbolic ‘immigrants’ from poorer countries pass along a process of migration, border entry, settlement, integration and (hence) the attainment of full moral and political citizenship in an affluent modern western society, as proof of the cohesive and developmental powers of a socially ‘diverse’, ‘inclusive’ and ‘sovereign’ modern nation-state ‘society’. Along the way, the differentiation at work here ensures others are excluded or marginalized by the selective trajectory imagined in the image of the successful ‘immigrant’. Meanwhile, as we will see, the heavy imposition of ‘integration’ as the unique symbolic burden of disadvantaged ‘ethnic minorities’ and ‘immigrants’ also enables the elites of these same societies to increasingly float free of the same obligations as global free movers.

      It has become a cliché that key concepts in the social sciences and humanities are ‘essentially contested’. This may be true sometimes, but such contests may also reflect intellectual confusion or dissimulation. In fact, digging into the historical origins, logic, contextualization and contemporary application of the concept ‘integration’ reveals a rather coherent and clear genealogy. Viewed this way, it is clear the use of the term commits scholars – including those who see their work as strictly positivist – to both political (i.e., normative) and methodological nationalism, as well as effectively an apologetics of the consequences of colonialism and empire. They may wish to buy into this – as a defence of ‘people’s’ democracy or the national welfare state, for example – but they need to be clear they do so for normative reasons (as in, e.g., Miller 2016). Critical scholars, however, with other values rooted in the struggle against global inequalities, against racism, and for notions of a transformative politics on a planetary scale, should steer well clear of its conceptual use. Only by critiquing the idea of immigrant integration can we contribute to decentring western views and decolonizing the language and terms of mainstream migration studies (Mayblin and Turner 2021).

Integration as a Paradigm

      International

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