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Making Space: Neighbors, Officials, and North African Migrants in the Suburbs of Paris and Lyon: France Overseas: Studies in Empire and Decolonization

Autor Melissa K. Byrnes
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 2024
Since the 2005 urban protests in France, public debate has often centered on questions of how the country has managed its relationship with its North African citizens and residents. In Making Space Melissa K. Byrnes considers how four French suburbs near Paris and Lyon reacted to rapidly growing populations of North Africans, especially Algerians before, during, and after the Algerian War. In particular, Byrnes investigates what motivated local actors such as municipal officials, regional authorities, employers, and others to become involved in debates over migrants’ rights and welfare, and the wide variety of strategies community leaders developed in response to the migrants’ presence. An examination of the ways local policies and attitudes formed and re-formed communities offers a deeper understanding of the decisions that led to the current tensions in French society and questions about France’s ability—and will—to fulfill the promise of liberty, equality, and fraternity for all of its citizens. Byrnes uses local experiences to contradict a version of French migration history that reads the urban unrest of recent years as preordained.
 
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781496237583
ISBN-10: 1496237587
Pagini: 354
Ilustrații: 5 photographs, 3 illustrations, 2 maps, 6 tables, index
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Nebraska
Colecția University of Nebraska Press
Seria France Overseas: Studies in Empire and Decolonization

Locul publicării:United States

Notă biografică

Melissa K. Byrnes is a professor of modern European and world history at Southwestern University in Georgetown, Texas.
 

Cuprins

List of Illustrations
List of Tables
List of Abbreviations and French Terms
Acknowledgements
Introduction: A View from the Field
Chapter 1. The Mission to Modernize
Chapter 2. Politics
Chapter 3. In Defense of Empire
Chapter 4. Anti-Imperialism
Chapter 5. Profit
Chapter 6. Solidarity
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Recenzii

"Making Space is a most welcome addition to the scholarship on twentieth-century France, decolonization, and the politics of migration. Its innovative use of archives at the municipal, departmental, and national level offers a model of detailed analysis that gets us closer to the often enigmatic question of how socialization and concomitant feelings of attachment and alienation can be described, understood, and, perhaps, addressed."—Amit Prakash, H-France Review

Making Space is a nuanced, deeply researched, and highly original account of how French modernization projects, migration policy, and local politics interacted in the era of decolonization. Melissa Byrnes carefully compares four distinct suburban municipalities to demonstrate the connections between urban renewal and the treatment of North African migrants, powerfully exposing the imperialist and racist blind spots of a supposedly colorblind French Republic, while at the same time demonstrating that local politics of social solidarity matter.”—Mary D. Lewis, Robert Walton Goelet Professor of French History at Harvard University

“In this well-crafted book Melissa Byrnes marshals an array of archival materials to examine four suburban communities near Paris and Lyon during long decolonization—in the final decades of French colonial rule and the decades following the collapse of the empire. In so doing she reveals white local officials’ complex and evolving efforts to make and deny space for citizens of North African descent. Moreover, Byrnes shows us that there are alternative French identities and eviscerates mythologies that France has a unified, universal, singular, white national identity.”—Amelia H. Lyons, author of The Civilizing Mission in the Metropole: Algerian Families and the French Welfare State during Decolonization

“Byrnes’s meticulously researched and thoughtfully written text addresses pertinent questions of migration through a focus on the local. How was migrant ‘integration’ experienced at a local level, and how did white French actors manage it? Byrnes demonstrates how migration is not just a question of nation-state policies and practices but rather a deeply local and microlevel phenomenon. By focusing on North African migrants to France she deftly contributes to unpacking how racism and Republicanism structures what it actually can mean to be French.”—Jean Beaman, author of Citizen Outsider: Children of North African Immigrants in France

Descriere

Melissa Byrnes explores the ways local communities in the French suburbs reacted to the growing presence of North African migrants in the decades after World War II and the decolonization of Algeria.