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13 - Transformations of ‘Dutchness’: From Happy Multiculturalism to the Crisis of Dutch Liberalism

from III - Cases of Belonging and Exclusion

Marc de Leeuw
Affiliation:
University of Humanistic
Sonja van Wichelen
Affiliation:
Yale University
Gerard Delanty
Affiliation:
University of Sussex
Ruth Wodak
Affiliation:
Lancaster University
Paul Jones
Affiliation:
University of Liverpool
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Summary

Just after the installation of the newly elected cabinet members in March 2007, the Netherlands witnessed the beginning of the so-called double passport debate. It followed the vote of no confidence by Geert Wilders, the leader of the right-wing Party for Freedom (PVV), with respect to two of the elected cabinet members: Ahmed Aboutaleb, the Moroccan-Dutch Assistant Secretary for Social Affairs and Employment, and Nebahat Albayrak, the Turkish-Dutch Assistant Secretary for Justice – both members of the Dutch labour party (PvdA). Wilders' vote of no confidence concerned the fact that the two members carried double passports, which he regarded as conflicting with their political loyalty to the Netherlands. Besides the legal debate on multiple nationalities, it prompted intense public discussions on loyalty, integration and Dutch citizenship.

Taking its cues from this debate, our chapter articulates two things. First, it maps out Dutch political and public transformations of the past decade with respect to cultural diversity. As we will illustrate, the Netherlands has been transformed from a multicultural welfare state in the 1990s to a country with an identity crisis whose citizens have increasingly started to support extreme right parties. We attempt to illustrate this transformation through an investigation of different, but interlocking, explanatory levels, namely, the events of two political murders and the emotive interplay of local, national and global fears of the Muslim Other. We argue that these political and public developments have engendered a national mood of ressentiment against a ‘politics from above’.

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Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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