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nr 2
109-112
EN
The review concerns a monograph on the transformation of Islamic movements in Egypt and Tunisia and their politicization, in particular after the Arab revolutions („Arab Spring"). The monograph presents an interdisciplinary approach to the discussed issues, but concentrates in particular on the achievements of social movement studies as well as studies of political Islam. The strength of the reviewed publication is also the analysis of the material obtained by the author during field research and interviews with the leaders of the Islamic movements and experts in the field of political Islam. Thanks to numerous fragments of interviews quoted in the book, as well as the publication of some of them selected in full, it aspires to enter the canon of publications about Islamism and broadly speaking policies in the Middle East and North Africa. Right balance between theory and practice further increases the attractiveness of the book.
PL
Recenzja dotyczy monografii poświęconej przemianom ruchów islamskich w Egipcie i Tunezji oraz ich polityzacji, w szczególności po rewolucjach arabskich określanych mianem "Arabskiej Wiosny". Monografia charakteryzuje się interdyscyplinarnym podejściem do omawianych zagadnień, lecz w szczególności czerpie z dorobku nauk o ruchach społecznych jak również z nauk o islamizmie. Mocną stroną recenzowanego opracowania jest również analiza materiału zdobytego przez autora podczas badań terenowych i wywiadów z liderami omawianych ruchów islamskich oraz ekspertami w dziedzinie islamu politycznego. To dzięki licznym fragmentom wywiadów, jak i zamieszczeniu wybranych z nich w całości, publikacja aspiruje do wejścia do kanonu lektur poruszających kwestie islamizmu i szerzej polityki na Bliskim Wschodzie i w Afryce Północnej. Zachowanie odpowiedniego balansu pomiędzy teorią i praktyką dodatkowo zwiększa atrakcyjność książki.
EN
In recent years, the issues of integration - related on the one hand to people referred to as foreigners, immigrants, newcomers, etc. - and on the other hand to host societies - have been gaining importance in the Central and Eastern European (CEE) countries, including Poland. Before the political and socio-economic transformation at the turn of the 1980s and the 1990s, it was a country relatively closed to international migration. Only in the early 1990s did it open up to migration flows. That was also the time when the state's policy in this area had been gradually emerging. The preparations for EU membership enforced the process of developing a national migration policy. Poland's accession to the EU in 2004 and to the Schengen zone in 2007 saw its full involvement in EU migration governance in terms of internal and external policies, and thus the further Europeanisation of national law, public policy, and practices in the field of migration management. Recent years have seen a change in Poland's migration status, which has now become an emigration-immigration state, and the near future may bring about its transition into a new immigration state, especially in connection with the influx of large numbers of forced migrants from Ukraine since the end of February 2022. At the time of writing, that is mid-2022, Poland does not have a formalised integration policy at the central level. National law provides integration measures only for beneficiaries of international protection (persons with refugee status and subsidiary protection), which concerns a very small group of foreigners. However, the last two decades have seen increased involvement at the local government level (especially in cities) in integration. This is a process taking place in local communities with the support of other actors such as NGOs, informal associations, or universities. One such example is Warsaw, the capital of Poland, where the largest number of migrants, both voluntary and forced, live. This paper aims to explore the selected practices undertaken by some of Warsaw’s municipal institutions and offi ces, which can be treated as an important part of the local integration policy and which could be a role model for other cities less experienced in immigrant integration.
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