Acknowledgments
Notes on Foreign Terms, Translation, and Transliteration
List of Abbreviations
Introduction: The Importance of the Unchosen Ones
Chapter 1: Originating Differences
Chapter 2: Free to Choose
Chapter 3: Problematic Others
Chapter 4: The Watershed Period
Chapter 5: The Soviet Exodus
Conclusion: The Rise and Demise of Co-Ethnic Immigration
Bibliography
Index
Jannis Panagiotidis is Junior Professor of Migration and Integration of Russian Germans at the Osnabrück University Institute for Migration Research and Intercultural Studies. He is editor (with Victor Dönninghaus and Hans-Christian Petersen) of "Jenseits der Volksgruppe": Neue Perspektiven auf die Russlanddeutschen zwischen Russland, Deutschland und Amerika.
"Jannis Panagiotidis' thought provoking book compares Germany and
Israel with regard to legislation and implementations concerning
co-ethnic immigration. Analogies and differences between the two
states are carefully analyzed showing how Israel a fascinating
chapter of entangled history that questions the currently prevalent
reading of ethno-cultural nationalism. Through the lens of
legislation and implementations concerning co-ethnic migrants
Jannis Panagiotidis thought provoking book highlights the
differences between the surprisingly similar states in this regard
- Germany and Israel - telling a fascinating chapter of entangled
history and questioning by doing so the prevalent reading of
ethno-cultural nationalism."—Yfaat Weiss - The Hebrew University of
Jerusalem/Dubnow Institute, Leipzig
"An extraordinarily important contribution to scholarship that
illuminates some of the key issues of twentieth-century
citizenship, nationalism, and transnational history. "—Jan Plamper,
author of The New We. Why Migration Is Not a Problem: A Different
History of the Germans (in German)
"A fascinating, original, well-researched, and persuasively argued
work that places the phenomenon of migration in the context of the
end of WWII, the Cold War, and the post-1989 world, and links it to
the history of forms of migration that since the early twentieth
century sought to disentangle societies in order to create
homogenous nation-states. "—Sebastian Conrad, author of What Is
Global History?
"Panagiotidis takes full advantage of the potential for comparison,
delving into the minutiae of legislation, political disputes, and
individual case studies. His conclusions are as insightful as they
are startling."—Joseph Cronin - Queen Mary University of London,
AJS Review
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