Full Description
Europe is trying to streamline its policy on the integration of immigrants and ethnic minorities. The information available on integration in the different countries is still very variable in its extent and quality. In this report, authors from sixteen European countries describe how integration is approached in their country, what the integration objectives of their government are, where the problems lie, and what the implications of this are for monitoring the process of integration over time in their country. Europe is trying to streamline its policy on the integration of immigrants and ethnic minorities. The information available on integration in the different countries is still very variable in its extent and quality. In this report, authors from sixteen European countries describe how integration is approached in their country, what the integration objectives of their government are, where the problems lie, and what the implications of this are for monitoring the process of integration over time in their country.
Contents
1 Measuring and Monitoring Immigrant's Integration in Europe fact and views 2 Monitoring Integration in Austria 3 Monitoring Integration in Belgium 4 Monitoring Integration in Czech Republic 4 Integration process in Denmark 5 Integration in Estonia 7 Germany: Integration in a federal state 8 Integration in Ireland 9 Integration in a reluctant immigration country: the case of Italy 10 Monitoring Integration in Latvia 11 Monitoring systems for the integration of ethnic minorities and immigrants in Lithuania 12 Monitoring Integration in the Netherlands 13 Monitoring integration in Norway 14 From (many) datasets to (one) integration monitoring system in Poland? 15 Monitoring immigrant integration in Portugal: Managing the gap between available data and implemented policy 16 Monitoring integration in Sweden.