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Tunisian Migrants and Their Experience of Racism in Modena
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 January 2016
Summary
Based both on the author's personal testimony of living, working and studying in Italy for ten years, and on his more recent sociological fieldwork, this article explores various dimensions of racism in the north Italian city of Modena, paying special attention to the experiences of Tunisian immigrants. The methodology comprises interviews with Tunisian immigrants and their employers, observations in bars and other public places, analysis of racism in the workplace, monitoring of the local media and reference to the national political debate. The findings reveal that being on the receiving end of racism, hostility and violence are regular facets of the everyday lives of Tunisian immigrants in Modena, as well as being part of a wider local and national anti-immigrant discourse.
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- Modern Italy , Volume 4 , Issue 2: Special Issue: The Italian experience of immigration , November 1999 , pp. 173 - 189
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- Copyright © Association for the study of Modern Italy
References
Notes
1. Strictly speaking, the term officially applies to other non-EU groups such as North Americans and Japanese, but in practice it is used to refer above all to African and Asian immigrants.Google Scholar
2. During this ten-year period, I studied for my first degree in economics at the University of Modena, which included my tesi di laurea on the living and working conditions of non-European migrants in Modena: Daly, Faïçal, Indagine sulle condizionl lavorative degli extracomunitari a Modena, unpublished graduation thesis. University of Modena, 1990. I also functioned as a migrant activist: in 1988 I helped to set up the non-European students‘ association and in 1990 I was active in setting up the Tunisian migrant workers’ association in Modena.Google Scholar
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