The Concept of Diversity in Migration and Urban Studies
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Version: Final published version
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State: Public
Version: Final published version
License: Not specified
Serval ID
serval:BIB_C7C815C9045D
Type
A part of a book
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
The Concept of Diversity in Migration and Urban Studies
Title of the book
The Economies of Urban Diversity. Ruhr Area and Istanbul
Publisher
New York: Palgrave
ISBN
978-1-137-34650-6
Publication state
Published
Issued date
10/2013
Editor
Reuschke Darja, Salzbrunn Monika, Schönhärl Korinna
Pages
27-46
Language
english
Abstract
The marketing of diversity in urban contexts results from two recent phenomena. First, the positive view taken of cosmopolitan and diverse urban environments (by city governments, by tourists, and by investors), and, second, the empowerment of minorities who put their religious, ethnic, and gendered expressions of (multiple) belonging on stage. In the following chapter, I give an overview of the concept of diversity in different scientific communities, starting from the first uses of the term 30 years ago in the United States. Recently, the German Sociological Association (GSA) organized its annual conference around the theme “Diversity and Cohesion: Challenges of a New Societal Complexity.”
Examples of the perceived (as growing) diversity of social expressions and forms of life include the increase in different religious communities; the flexibilization and differentiation of forms of work and occupation; the growing determination of people’s social conditions by diverse factors like communicative competence, networks, and experience; the continued differentiation of cultural orientations; the diverse development of lifestyles and sexual orientations; and the diffusion of new information and communication technologies. The initial question to be posed here is whether the situation is one of an empirically observable increase in these forms and patterns of diversity, or whether it is the case that (only) perceptions of them have changed. Further considerations are concerned with normative aspects of social cohesion. Is this promoted by increasing (perceptions of) diversity or can processes of the erosion of social cohesion be observed? At the same time it is postulated that the many forms of individual, collective, socially relevant diversity are always also socially created forms of diversity and that their relationship to cohesion is thus not fundamentally strained.
Examples of the perceived (as growing) diversity of social expressions and forms of life include the increase in different religious communities; the flexibilization and differentiation of forms of work and occupation; the growing determination of people’s social conditions by diverse factors like communicative competence, networks, and experience; the continued differentiation of cultural orientations; the diverse development of lifestyles and sexual orientations; and the diffusion of new information and communication technologies. The initial question to be posed here is whether the situation is one of an empirically observable increase in these forms and patterns of diversity, or whether it is the case that (only) perceptions of them have changed. Further considerations are concerned with normative aspects of social cohesion. Is this promoted by increasing (perceptions of) diversity or can processes of the erosion of social cohesion be observed? At the same time it is postulated that the many forms of individual, collective, socially relevant diversity are always also socially created forms of diversity and that their relationship to cohesion is thus not fundamentally strained.
Create date
12/12/2012 16:56
Last modification date
30/01/2024 7:32