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Västernorrland och Nordamerika, 1875-1913 ; Utvandring och återinvandring
In: Studia historica Upsaliensia, Utg. av Historika Institutionenvid Uppsala Universitet 42
In: Scandinavian University Books
Invandringspolitiken: Bakgrund ; delbetänkande av Invandrarpolit. Kommittén
In: Statens offentliga utredningar 1982,49 : Arbetsmarknadsdep.
Tema invandrare - Theme immigrants
In: Levnadsförhållanden rapport nr. 38
In: Sveriges officiella statistik
Invandrarnas situation i Sverige: en översikt
In: Immigrant-institutet
In: Ser. A, Uppsatser och debatt nr. 7
Emigration, folkomflyttning och säsongarbete i ett sågverksdistrikt i södra Hälsingland 1865-1910: Björn Rondahl ; Söderala kommun med särskild hänsyn till Ljusne industrisamhälle. Summary in English
In: (Studia historica Upsaliensia 40)
In: (Scandinavian university books)
Utvandrarnes egna uppgifter: upplysningar inhemtade genom Emigrationsutredningens agenter äfvensom bref fr°an svenskar i Amerika
In: Emigrationsutredningen, Bilaga 7
Valfardsstaten och de nyanlanda. Politik for flyktingars bosattning i Sverige, Danmark och Norge
In: Statsvetenskaplig tidskrift, Band 109, Heft 2, S. 118-122
ISSN: 0039-0747
The immigration of people from other parts of the world has meant new challenges to the Nordic welfare model and its fundamental idea of social integration and full citizenship. Current policy in Scandinavian countries calls for distributing newly arriving refugees between different regions and housing areas. This article examines the dilemmas created by this policy, and how such dilemmas are perceived and handled in Sweden, Denmark and Norway. With reference to previous related research, similarities and differences between the three countries' policies are analyzed at both national and local levels. The article's authors note that an immigrant policy characterized by the goal of social integration has created tensions between the ideals of integration versus the preservation of ethnic cultures, the individual versus the collective, and egalitarianism versus specialized treatment of immigrants as a group separate from the general population. Sweden, Denmark, and Norway have differed in their handling of these tensions, with Sweden opting for an approach based on a multicultural model, whereas Denmark has adopted a strict integrationist policy, including limits on the immigration of foreign residents' relatives, and Norway adopting a middle position. On the local level, the immigration policies and practices of Malmo, Arhus, and Oslo, as respective representative communities of the three countries under study, are compared. Adapted from the source document.