What can co-ethnic immigrants tell us about ethnic visions of the national self? A comparative analysis of Germany and Greece

Abstract

Nations with a predominantly ethno-cultural self-perception and citizenship based on jus sanguinis are under pressure today to adopt more civic-territorial ideas of nationhood, including elements of jus soli. Two nations experiencing these trends in Europe but have rarely been juxtaposed are Greece and Germany. Characteristic of both nations is a long reserved privileged access to citizenship and settlement assistance for co-ethnic immigrants from Eastern Europe and recently the Former Soviet Union. This article argues that changes to the way these privileged immigrant groups and their settlement are addressed should also reflect changes to the national idiom. The paper contrasts Greece to Germany and finds that, similarly to developments in its northern counterpart, Greek repatriates from the Former Soviet Union have been an important consequence of the ethnocultural idiom and reinforced it at times. In the new millennium these immigrants’ importance is diminishing in reality, if not on paper. The article concludes that in spite of this and the citizenship reform of 2010, the tendency to see the country as a culturally homogeneous nation is still fairly strong in Greece. The analysis draws on interviews with ‘repatriates’ in both countries and with national policy-makers in Greece, as well as on newspaper clippings, opinion polls and statistical data, complemented by leading scholarship in the field to date.

Authors and Affiliations

Christin Heß

Keywords

Related Articles

“Just because they’re lies doesn’t mean they’re not true”: Learning and transmission of lies among storytellers

In diverse rural communities located near the borders separating Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay, traditional storytellers known as contadores de causos use lying as a strategy for their performances. Their legitimacy as...

Being a homeopath. Learning and practice in a homeopathic community

In this In this paper I look at the Romanian homeopathic practice through the conceptual lens of the communities of practice. Through interviews with homeopathic practitioners, I investigate the ways they accumulate an...

Old and new rites of passage in contemporary Western societies: A focus on marriage and divorce ceremonies

This article deals with ceremonial behaviors related to changes of status in individuals’ life courses, that is to say, with rites of passage. Drawing on Arnold van Gennep’s classic book on Les rites de passage, we fir...

Cathy O'Neil (2016) Weapons of Math Destruction: How Big Data Increases Inequality and Threatens Democracy, New York, St. Martin’s Press and Virginia Eubanks (2018) Automating Inequality: How High-Tech Tools Profile, Police, and Punish the Poor, New York, Broadway Books.

Providing personal data is something that we do on a regular basis, from filling out governmental forms and documents to indicating preferences and habitual patterns on social media and consumer websites. However, ther...

The representation of older people playing a digital game in the short film 'Pony Place': A semiotic and narratological analysis

This article focuses on Dutch older adults’ use of digital devices in general, and digital games in particular, from an intergenerational perspective. We first present some facts related to provide insight into how Dut...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP40936
  • DOI -
  • Views 224
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Christin Heß (2011). What can co-ethnic immigrants tell us about ethnic visions of the national self? A comparative analysis of Germany and Greece. Journal of Comparative Research in Anthropology and Sociology, 2(1), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-40936