Samuel D. Schmid: Resolving the paradox of the liberal paradox: Immigration and citizenship policies in 23 democracies 1980-2010

When: Thursday, 14. June 2018, 6:30 p.m. Where: Hörsaal 2 IPW (A 0218), NIG, Universitätsstraße 7/2. Stock, 1010 Vienna. Guest lecture by Samuel D. Schmid (European University Instiute) as part of the IPW Lectures, an international lecture series at the Department of Political Science, University of Vienna.

Invitation to the IPW Lecture: Resolving the paradox of the liberal paradox: Immigration and citizenship policies in 23 democracies 1980-2010

Lecturer: Samuel D. Schmid (European University Institute)
Moderation: Jeremias Stadlmair (Department of Political Science, University of Vienna)

When: Thursday, 14. June 2018, 18:30
Where: Hörsaal 2 IPW (A 0218), NIG, Universitätsstraße 7/2. Stock, 1010 Vienna

Abstract:
In this lecture, Samuel D. Schmid argues that immigration and citizenship policies configure along two independent dimensions that can be combined in various ways across space and over time. He proposes a typology – the fruits of immigration – as a fruitful metaphor to describe the different ideal-typical policy configurations of immigration regime openness and citizenship regime inclusiveness. Based on an original combination of new datasets covering 23 democracies from 1980 to 2010, the empirical analysis validates the typology and reveals that overall immigration regimes have become more open, and citizenship regimes more inclusive. Indeed, most cases can be classified as blueberry regimes that are relatively soft both on the outside and the inside. The investigation therefore shows that many states have escaped what has been described in the literature as the “liberal paradox” – a notion that, as Sam will argue, is in fact paradoxical in itself and can be resolved by the fruits of immigration typology.

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