When not all people within a state identify with the dominant sense of nationality, movements for separation of nation and territory may arise. For example the Basque in Spain.…
order for one of the new territories to become a state they were required to reach a given…
The Nazis had move hundred of thousands of foreign workers into Germany, million more were POWs, some returned to their homeland, other were forced, hundreds found refuge in W. Europe.…
were not allowed to vote, own property, to speak in public, or serve on juries. In the nineteenth…
The current leaders in these European nations have opened their borders, accepting all the self purported "refugees" and instead opened their borders to invite those seeking to take advantage of generous people with honest intentions. Instead of receiving the downtrodden, these nations are becoming the downtrodden as the crime rates increase exponentially, and all forms of humanitarian aid being rejected by the advancing legions of people.…
Citizenship has come along way. The citizenship we know today was highly influenced by Athens and Rome. In ancient Athens, it was difficult to become a citizen only a selected amount of men were allowed to become citizens. Becoming a citizen of the Roman Republic was easier, therefore there was bigger variety in the citizenship system. Although citizenship in Athens was more cautious and demanding than the citizenship in Rome, Rome’s Citizenship was better because more people could have become citizens and their system was more organized.…
During the time period of the twentieth century in Europe and the Middle East there were significant changes occurring in major forced migration movements such as Muslims during the Balkan Wars and many Jews during World War II. ‘Superpower’s’ (or successful dominant European countries) citizens never migrating away from their homeland remained constant.…
Sarah Morehouse’s presentation on statelessness within the hill tribes in northern Thailand discussed a plan to eradicate undocumented hill tribe members who do not identify as having a state-identity. Morehouse discussed that “hundreds of families have migrated into Northern Thailand. There, they are denied political refugee status, but are still allowed to live within constrained districts. However, the hill tribe members have no legal bond with the country and are therefore considered stateless” (Morehouse 2017). In Thailand, stateless hill tribe members are denied the right to vote, own property, or have sufficient access to education and health care systems. Morehouse further mentioned that “statelessness has led to political fragmentation…
In Athens, you had to be born to Athenian parents to be able to vote, and hold roles in the government. If a slave gained freedom from his owner, he still would have no chance in getting into a higher social class, while the ones born to Athenian parents would have to be there to be considered a citizen. In the Roman Republic, the lower class called the Plebeians, had no say in the government at first, while the higher class called the Patricians, had a say in the government. The Plebeians not having a say in the government in the beginning, which they made up 95% of the population and also had most of the soldiers was less democratic in the way that only the 5% had a say in the…
Chapter 8 – African Civilizations and the Spread of Islam •The spread of Islam in Africa linked its regions to the outside world through trade, religion, and politics •States like Mali and Songhai are built on military power and dynastic alliances •Parts of sub-Saharan Africa entered into the expanding world network; many others remained isolated •Christianity and Islam sometimes influenced political and cultural development Empires of the Western Sudan (West/Northwest Africa) th th …
- slaves could not participate in the government: no political rights or personal freedoms were granted to them…
The world was aglow with change during the mid-nineteenth century. Revolutions, both political and industrial, were in full force by the late 1840’s throughout much of continental Europe and the United States. In 1848, the ‘Spring of Nations’, or ‘Springtime of the Peoples’, consumed France, Austria, Hungary, Russia, Denmark, Poland, and many nation-states within what is now present-day Germany and Italy. With nationalist movements at the core, the peoples of Europe--in almost one singular voice--sought not only independence from the oppressive monarchies of Europe, they fiercely desired a sense of self, or nativism, as had been the underlying cause of the French and American Revolutions several decades earlier. While many bore patriotic banners to pursue these xenophobic endeavors, a significant number immigrated away from mainland Europe to the safety of Canada, Australia, New Zealand and the United States (again, to name a few).…
Once the children cross international boarders, they become asylum seekers. An asylum seeker is a person who has moved across international borders in search of protection and has filed a claim for asylum with the host country’s government. If the claim is accepted, the person becomes a refugee. “…it takes several weeks or months before they know whether they will be allowed to stay in Germany” [King 3]. An asylum is shelter or protection from danger granted by a country to someone forced to leave his or her home…
The effects of not belonging can be seen in many current issues, one being asylum seekers. An asylum seeker is a person who from fear of persecution, for reasons of race, religion, social group, or political opinion, has crossed an international frontier into a country in which he or she hopes to be granted refugee status. The feeling of not belonging, can cause innocent people to flee their country. The effects that not belonging can have can be seen clearly in many current events,…
Migrants and refugees often feel a loss of connection and identity which leads to a…