Property | Value |
?:abstract
|
-
"Since the sixties, Germany has been an immigration country. The number and the percentage of ethnic minorities working and living in Germany have almost steadily increased. Today, more than eight million inhabitants of Germany - or more than ten percent of its population - belong to non-German ethnic groups.This development has demographic reasons: For more than thirty years, Germany has had very low birth rates; each generation of children is by about one third smaller than the generation of their parents. And that means: without immigration the economy as well as the system of social security - especially for the elderly people - would have collapsed. This trend will continuue. There is no doubt that Germany will need immigration in the next decades, and that the percentage of ethnic minorities will double from about 10% nowadays to more than 20% in twenty or thirty years (cf. Geißler 2002, 49-80). Consequently, Germany faces a great challenge: the challenge of integration, of integrating its increasing ethnic minorities. And the question of my presentation - "Do 'foreigners' commit more crimes than Germans?" -, the question whether immigrants abide by the laws of their immigration country, is of crucial importance for their acceptance and integration. High crime rates of migrant workers would be a serious obstacle to their integration."
(xsd:string)
|
?:author
|
|
?:comment
|
|
?:dataSource
|
-
ALLBUS-Bibliography
(xsd:string)
|
?:dateCreated
|
-
Aufgenommen: 20. Fassung, Februar 2005
(xsd:gyear)
|
?:dateModified
|
|
?:datePublished
|
|
?:duplicate
|
|
is
?:hasPart
of
|
|
?:inLanguage
|
|
is
?:mainEntity
of
|
|
?:name
|
-
Do "foreigners" commit more crimes than Germans? Some remarks on a complex problem
(xsd:string)
|
?:publicationType
|
-
inproceedings
(xsd:string)
|
?:reference
|
|
?:sourceCollection
|
-
International Symposium: Will Japan Become a Multiethnic Society? - Immigration policy and national identity in Japan, Germany, France and the United States (Asia Foundation, Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, Stanford Japan Center)
(xsd:string)
|
?:sourceInfo
|
-
Bibsonomy
(xsd:string)
-
In International Symposium: Will Japan Become a Multiethnic Society? - Immigration policy and national identity in Japan, Germany, France and the United States (Asia Foundation, Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, Stanford Japan Center), 2004
(xsd:string)
|
?:startDate
|
|
?:studyGroup
|
|
?:tags
|
-
2004
(xsd:string)
-
ALLBUS
(xsd:string)
-
ALLBUS1996
(xsd:string)
-
ALLBUS_input2004
(xsd:string)
-
ALLBUS_pro
(xsd:string)
-
ALLBUS_version20
(xsd:string)
-
FDZ_ALLBUS
(xsd:string)
-
checked
(xsd:string)
-
english
(xsd:string)
-
inproceedings
(xsd:string)
|
rdf:type
|
|