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Abstract

In the introduction to this special issue of JEMS, we question the strong link which is often made between the integration of minority ethnic groups and their residential segregation. In the literature on neighbourhood effects, the residential concentration of minorities is seen as a major obstacle to their integration, while the residential segregation literature emphasises the opposite causal direction, by focusing on the effect of integration on levels of (de-)segregation. The papers in this special issue, however, indicate that integration and segregation cannot be linked in a straightforward way. Policy discourses tend to depict residential segregation in a negative light, but the process of assimilation into the housing market is highly complex and differs between and within ethnic groups. The integration pathway not only depends on the characteristics of migrants themselves, but also on the reactions of the institutions and the population of the receiving society.

Notes

1. Here we acknowledge the important contributions to this debate contained in a recent special issue of JEMS guest-edited by Ludi Simpson and Ceri Peach (2009a); see especially the papers by Kalra and Kapoor (2009), Peach (2009) and Simpson and Peach (Citation2009b).

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Gideon Bolt

Gideon Bolt is Lecturer in Urban Geography at Utrecht University

A. Sule Özüekren

A. Sule Özüekren is Professor in the Faculty of Architecture at Istanbul Technical University

Deborah Phillips

Deborah Phillips is Reader in Geography at the University of Leeds

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