Die Dynamik Ethnischer Wohnviertel in Wien: Eine Sozialraumliche Longitudinalanalyse 1981 Und 2005 Contributor(s): Kohlbacher, Josef (Author), Reeger, Ursula (Author), Institut Fur Stadt Und, Regionalforschun (Editor) |
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ISBN: 370013813X ISBN-13: 9783700138136 Publisher: Austrian Academy of Sciences Press OUR PRICE: $21.85 Product Type: Paperback Language: German Published: December 2006 Annotation: From the Introduction: Like many other West European metropolises, since the early 1960s Vienna has been a target for the migration of "guest workers" from the Balkan. "Guest workers" from the former multinational Yugoslavia are not only the "oldest," but if based on numbers, also the most important group of immigrants in Vienna. The neighborhoods of this group of immigrants are also unequally distributed throughout the metropolis. Ethnic segregation is a social-spatial phenomenon that occurs in all large cities. The population from former Yugoslavia belongs to one of the lowest classes of the worker migration, and it is still concentrated above all in neighborhoods with older buildings and low living standards. German text. |
Additional Information |
BISAC Categories: - Social Science | Emigration & Immigration - Social Science | Ethnic Studies - General - History | Europe - Austria & Hungary |
Dewey: 305.906 |
LCCN: 2009379115 |
Series: Isr-Forschungsberichte |
Physical Information: 113 pages |
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc. |
Publisher Description: Like many other West European metropolises, since the early 1960s Vienna has been a target for the migration of guest workers from the Balkan. Guest workers from the former multi-national Yugoslavia are not only the oldest, but if based on numbers, also the most important group of immigrants in Vienna. The neighbourhoods of this group of immigrants are also unequally distributed throughout the metropolis. Ethnic segregation is a social-spatial phenomenon that occurs in all large cities. The population from former Yugoslavia belongs to one of the lowest classes of the worker migration, and it is still concentrated above all in neighbourhoods with older buildings and low living standards. |