Becoming Europe: Immigration, Integration, and the Welfare
State. By Patrick Ireland. Pittsburgh: Pittsburgh University Press,
2004. 288p. $27.95.
Patrick Ireland begins this detailed and clearly presented discussion
about belonging in relation to patterns of European Union migration by
raising a critical issue with the concept of ethnicity, defined as a
“collective group consciousness that imparts a sense of belonging
derived from membership in a community bound putatively by common descent
and culture” (pp. 2–3). Ireland's study finds that
belonging is context specific, rather than derived from common descent.
This finding implies that there is by definition no readily available
general policy applicable to one type of immigrants, say, Turks or
Moroccans across all EU member states. Instead, each country's
possibilities for integration differ. To Ireland, ethnicity “is not
so much a category as a dynamic, elastic entity. Its value as a social,
economic, and political resource varies; the appraisal depends
considerably on institutions and policies.” (pp. 4–5).