J 2006

Evaluation of the Impact of Inclusion Policies under the Open Method of Co-ordination in the European Union: Assessing the Cultural Policies of Six Member States.

VAŠEČKA, Michal, Tove MALLOY and Michele GAZZOLA

Basic information

Original name

Evaluation of the Impact of Inclusion Policies under the Open Method of Co-ordination in the European Union: Assessing the Cultural Policies of Six Member States.

Name in Czech

Evaluace dopadu politik začleňování metodou otevřené koordinace (OMC) v EU: Analýza kulturních politik šesti členských států.

Authors

VAŠEČKA, Michal, Tove MALLOY and Michele GAZZOLA

Edition

ECMI Working Paper, Flensburg, European Centre for Minority Issues, 2006, 1435-9812

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Článek v odborném periodiku

Field of Study

50000 5. Social Sciences

Country of publisher

Germany

Confidentiality degree

není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství

References:

Organization unit

Faculty of Social Studies

Keywords in English

minorities; culture policies; OMC method; inclusion; integration; employment policies; inter-cultural navigators

Tags

International impact
Změněno: 20/3/2010 12:43, Mgr. Lucie Galčanová Batista, Ph.D.

Abstract

V originále

There is a glaring lack of data collected by Member States in the area of immigrant inclusion and citizenship. Member States implement their common commitments in diverse ways. Member States tend to score consistently across the five areas. There are no major differences in policy between countries with long and short migration histories. Although statuses for immigrants are relatively difficult to acquire and weakly protected, they have significant rights associated with them. Naturalization remains one of the most problematic areas for Member States. This reflects the ongoing debate over whether migration should be seen as a long-term or temporary phenomenon.

In Czech

There is a glaring lack of data collected by Member States in the area of immigrant inclusion and citizenship. Member States implement their common commitments in diverse ways. Member States tend to score consistently across the five areas. There are no major differences in policy between countries with long and short migration histories. Although statuses for immigrants are relatively difficult to acquire and weakly protected, they have significant rights associated with them. Naturalization remains one of the most problematic areas for Member States. This reflects the ongoing debate over whether migration should be seen as a long-term or temporary phenomenon.

Links

MSM0021622408, plan (intention)
Name: Reprodukce a integrace společnosti (Acronym: IVRIS)
Investor: Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the CR, Reproduction and integration of society