The increased engagement of states with their co-ethnics abroad has recently become one of the most contentious features of European politics. Until recently, the issue has been discussed predominantly within the paradigm of international security; yet a review of the broader European picture shows that kin-state engagement can in fact have a positive societal impact when it actually responds effectively to the claims formulated by co-ethnic communities themselves.

Poland's Kin-State Policies: Opportunities and Challenges offers new insights into this issue by examining Poland’s fast-evolving relationship with Polish communities living beyond its borders. Its central focus is the Act on the Polish Card (generally known as Karta Polaka). Tracing policymaking processes and the underlying political agendas that have shaped them, the volume situates Poland’s engagement within broader conceptual and normative debates around kin-state and diaspora politics and explores its reception and impact in neighbouring states (Ukraine, Germany, Lithuania). The volume highlights how the issue of co-ethnics abroad is increasingly being instrumentalised, most especially for the purposes of attracting labour migration to resolve the demographic crisis in Poland.

The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Ethnopolitics.

Les mer

Poland's Kin-State Policies: Opportunities and Challenges offers new insights into this issue by examining Poland’s fast-evolving relationship with Polish communities living beyond its borders. Its central focus is the Act on the Polish Card (generally known as Karta Polaka).

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1. Karta Polaka, Poland and its Co-ethnics Abroad

Andreea Udrea, David Smith and Karl Cordell

2. Karta Polaka—New Wine in Old Bottles

Dorota Pudzianowska

3. The Paradoxical Nature of Diaspora Engagement Policies: A World Polity Perspective on the Karta Polaka

Bastian Sendhardt

4. Divided Nationhood and Multiple Membership: A Framework for Assessing Kin-State Policies and Their Impact

Myra A. Waterbury

5. Pragmatic Trans-Border Nationalism: A Comparative Analysis of Poland’s and Hungary’s Policies Towards Kin-Minorities in the Twenty-First Century

Magdalena Lesińska and Dominik Héjj

6. Minority Protection and Kin-State Engagement: Karta Polaka in Comparative Perspective

Andreea Udrea and David Smith

7. The Polish Minority in Germany: Marginal or Marginalised?

Karl Cordell

8. Between Two Kin-States: The Round Table Meetings on the German Minority in Poland and the Poles in Germany 2010–2019

Sławomir Łodzinski

9. Relations Between Polish Immigrant Organisations in Germany and Institutions of the Polish and German States

Michał Nowosielski

10. Does Polish Origin Matter? The Integration Challenges of Polish Card Holders in Poland

Myroslava Keryk

11. Identities of and Policies Towards the Polish National Minority in Lithuania

Diana Janušauskienė

12. National Bonds, Foreign Policy and the Future of Europe

Jan Zielonka

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781032040288
Publisert
2021-09-06
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Vekt
470 gr
Høyde
246 mm
Bredde
174 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
158

Biografisk notat

Andreea Udrea co-convenes KINPOL Observatory on Kin-state Policies at the University of Glasgow. With Professor David Smith, she led a two-year project entitled ‘Poland’s Kin-state Policies: Opportunities and Challenges’ funded by the Noble Foundation Programme on Modern Poland.

David Smith is Professor and Alec Nove Chair in Russian and East European Studies at the University of Glasgow, where he co-convenes the KINPOL Observatory on Kin-state Policies and the Glasgow Baltic Research Unit.

Karl Cordell is Emeritus Professor of Politics at the University of Plymouth.