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DETAIL TITULU:

Sociologický časopis 3/2023

Moving Beyond the Narrative of the Migration ‘Crisis'

Sociologický ústav AVČR 2023

brožovaná121 str.
ISBN 977003802800003

obálka
85,-
77,-
SKLADEM

Editorial
Introduction to the Special Issue: Moving Beyond the Narrative of the Migration ‘Crisis'
Bernadette Nadya Jaworsky, Ivana Rapoš Božič
Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review 2023, 59(3): 261-267

Stati
The Legitimacy of European Union Migration and Asylum Policy among the Czech Public
Jan Krotký, Bernadette Nadya Jaworsky, Petr Kaniok
Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review 2023, 59(3): 269-291 | DOI: 10.13060/csr.2023.003

In this study, we contribute to scholarly work on European Union (EU) legitimacy with regard to migration and asylum policy. We do so through an in-depth exploration of the relationship between attitudes towards the EU and migration among the Czech public. Even though there is a body of literature focusing on this topic, there is a gap when it comes to understanding its complexities, especially concerning 'pro-immigrant' and 'pro-European' positions. We bring a cultural-sociological perspective on meaning-making processes into conversation with theories on the legitimacy of the EU, an analytical move that helps us reveal the nuances in attitudes towards...

‘Not Knowing When It's Going to Happen and What's Going to Happen': The Time Politics of Applying for a Residence Permit in the Czech Republic
Veronika Kotýnková Krotká
Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review 2023, 59(3): 293-314 | DOI: 10.13060/csr.2023.036

This study focuses on the time politics involved in applying for a residence permit in the Czech Republic, with a focus on non-European Union (EU) applicants. It examines how governmentality and state superiority are represented and performed within the bureaucratic procedure of the application process. Based on the results, I argue that the application process bureaucracy is tied to time politics - practices that govern others through time. The paper is based on research realised in Brno, the second-largest city in the Czech Republic, and uses qualitative, ethnographic observations and semi-structured interviews with immigrants from non-EU countries...

Searching for the ‘Muslims' in Czech Islamophobia and the Effects of Intergroup Contact in Challenging the ‘Fear of the Unknown'
Carlos Gómez del Tronco
Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review 2023, 59(3): 315-338 | DOI: 10.13060/csr.2023.037

Since at least 2014, cross-national surveys have measured the most negative attitudes towards 'Muslims' in the EU among Czech respondents. These attitudes have often been attributed to few contact opportunities with actual Muslims in the country and, thus, public overreliance on the highly negative representations of 'Muslims' in public discourse. However, empirical qualitative assessments of the stereotypes which guide many Czechs' anti-Muslim prejudice and the effects of intergroup contact have been neglected. In an epistemological shortcoming, the survey category 'Muslim' has often been treated as one of analysis rather than of practice. Contrarily,...

‘We Have Always Been like This': The Local Embeddedness of Migration Attitudes
Ivana Rapoš Božič, Alica Synek Rétiová, Radka Klvaňová
Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review 2023, 59(3): 339-365 | DOI: 10.13060/csr.2023.030

This article contributes to the local turn in migration research. It explores how the city context shapes migration attitudes among residents, resulting in the formation of imagined communities of 'Locals' and 'Others'. Relying on qualitative research methods and cultural sociological theories of cultural armatures of the city, cultural repertoires, and symbolic boundaries, we examine the cases of two Czech cities, Teplice and Vyšší Brod. We find that the specific characteristics of the local history, geography, and demography of the cities give rise to distinct cultural repertoires that shape how their residents view migration and the presence of...

Recenze
Tomasz Inglot, Dorottya Szikra and Cristina Ra?: Mothers, Families, or Children? Family Policy in Poland, Hungary, and Romania, 1945-2020
Sergiu Delcea
Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review 2023, 59(3): 367-370

Nancy Folbre: The Rise and Decline of Patriarchal Systems: An Intersectional Political Economy
Frederik Pfeiffer
Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review 2023, 59(3): 370-373

Minouche Shafik: What We Owe Each Other: A New Social Contract for a Better Society
Nora Kannisto
Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review 2023, 59(3): 373-375

John Wall: Give Children the Vote: On Democratizing Democracy
Óskar Da?i Jóhannsson
Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review 2023, 59(3): 375-377

Daron Acemoglu: Redesigning AI - Work, Democracy, and Justice in the Age of Automation
Selina Dzafic
Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review 2023, 59(3): 377-379

Nuno Crato: Improving a Country's Education PISA 2018 Results in 10 Countries
Nanna Rahbek Jorgensen
Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review 2023, 59(3): 379-380

Bertel Nygaard: History and the Formation of Marxism
Baihe Zhang
Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review 2023, 59(3): 380-382