Displacing the other to unite the nation: The parallel society legislation in Denmark

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Displacing the other to unite the nation : The parallel society legislation in Denmark. / Lundsteen, Martin.

I: European Urban and Regional Studies, Bind 30, Nr. 3, 07.04.2023, s. 261-281.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Lundsteen, M 2023, 'Displacing the other to unite the nation: The parallel society legislation in Denmark', European Urban and Regional Studies, bind 30, nr. 3, s. 261-281. https://doi.org/10.1177/09697764231165202

APA

Lundsteen, M. (2023). Displacing the other to unite the nation: The parallel society legislation in Denmark. European Urban and Regional Studies, 30(3), 261-281. https://doi.org/10.1177/09697764231165202

Vancouver

Lundsteen M. Displacing the other to unite the nation: The parallel society legislation in Denmark. European Urban and Regional Studies. 2023 apr. 7;30(3):261-281. https://doi.org/10.1177/09697764231165202

Author

Lundsteen, Martin. / Displacing the other to unite the nation : The parallel society legislation in Denmark. I: European Urban and Regional Studies. 2023 ; Bind 30, Nr. 3. s. 261-281.

Bibtex

@article{e7b673d1e41748fb9ff3a266d28a9e9b,
title = "Displacing the other to unite the nation: The parallel society legislation in Denmark",
abstract = "In 2018, the then right-wing government in Denmark led by Lars Lokke Rasmussen and supported by the extreme right-wing party Danish People's Party presented new legislation to end 'parallel societies' in Denmark by toughening the criminal law, enforcing Danish knowledge and nursery school assistance to toddlers, and, more importantly for this article, a series of urban interventions in 'ghetto areas' considered as such mainly when the proportion of immigrants and descendants from non-Western countries exceeded 50 per cent. Until recently research has focused on either the discursive elements of the 'ghetto politics' in Denmark or the urban interventions from an architectural or urban planning point of view. However, newfangled research deal with the entwined economic elements. In this article, I compare the different developmental plans proposed in the affected areas because of the legislation, with an aim to reach further and point at the inherent elements of urban b/ordering, that is, measures taken to attain social order and gain legitimacy by demarcating categories of people to incorporate some and exclude others through urban space. Indeed, through this comparison, I conclude that the ghetto legislation is a compelling example of the urban b/ordering inherent to the politics and dynamics of current liberal capitalist social democracies. It is a social experiment that remodels the geography of Denmark in terms that recall the eugenic and hygienic social and urban policies of the 19th century and form part of a worrying pattern that may have consequences that go beyond the stated ones.",
keywords = "Urban bordering, urban planning, nation-building, ghettos, parallel society legislation, SOCIAL MIX",
author = "Martin Lundsteen",
year = "2023",
month = apr,
day = "7",
doi = "10.1177/09697764231165202",
language = "English",
volume = "30",
pages = "261--281",
journal = "European Urban and Regional Studies",
issn = "0969-7764",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Displacing the other to unite the nation

T2 - The parallel society legislation in Denmark

AU - Lundsteen, Martin

PY - 2023/4/7

Y1 - 2023/4/7

N2 - In 2018, the then right-wing government in Denmark led by Lars Lokke Rasmussen and supported by the extreme right-wing party Danish People's Party presented new legislation to end 'parallel societies' in Denmark by toughening the criminal law, enforcing Danish knowledge and nursery school assistance to toddlers, and, more importantly for this article, a series of urban interventions in 'ghetto areas' considered as such mainly when the proportion of immigrants and descendants from non-Western countries exceeded 50 per cent. Until recently research has focused on either the discursive elements of the 'ghetto politics' in Denmark or the urban interventions from an architectural or urban planning point of view. However, newfangled research deal with the entwined economic elements. In this article, I compare the different developmental plans proposed in the affected areas because of the legislation, with an aim to reach further and point at the inherent elements of urban b/ordering, that is, measures taken to attain social order and gain legitimacy by demarcating categories of people to incorporate some and exclude others through urban space. Indeed, through this comparison, I conclude that the ghetto legislation is a compelling example of the urban b/ordering inherent to the politics and dynamics of current liberal capitalist social democracies. It is a social experiment that remodels the geography of Denmark in terms that recall the eugenic and hygienic social and urban policies of the 19th century and form part of a worrying pattern that may have consequences that go beyond the stated ones.

AB - In 2018, the then right-wing government in Denmark led by Lars Lokke Rasmussen and supported by the extreme right-wing party Danish People's Party presented new legislation to end 'parallel societies' in Denmark by toughening the criminal law, enforcing Danish knowledge and nursery school assistance to toddlers, and, more importantly for this article, a series of urban interventions in 'ghetto areas' considered as such mainly when the proportion of immigrants and descendants from non-Western countries exceeded 50 per cent. Until recently research has focused on either the discursive elements of the 'ghetto politics' in Denmark or the urban interventions from an architectural or urban planning point of view. However, newfangled research deal with the entwined economic elements. In this article, I compare the different developmental plans proposed in the affected areas because of the legislation, with an aim to reach further and point at the inherent elements of urban b/ordering, that is, measures taken to attain social order and gain legitimacy by demarcating categories of people to incorporate some and exclude others through urban space. Indeed, through this comparison, I conclude that the ghetto legislation is a compelling example of the urban b/ordering inherent to the politics and dynamics of current liberal capitalist social democracies. It is a social experiment that remodels the geography of Denmark in terms that recall the eugenic and hygienic social and urban policies of the 19th century and form part of a worrying pattern that may have consequences that go beyond the stated ones.

KW - Urban bordering

KW - urban planning

KW - nation-building

KW - ghettos

KW - parallel society legislation

KW - SOCIAL MIX

U2 - 10.1177/09697764231165202

DO - 10.1177/09697764231165202

M3 - Journal article

VL - 30

SP - 261

EP - 281

JO - European Urban and Regional Studies

JF - European Urban and Regional Studies

SN - 0969-7764

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 345064207