One of the defining political questions of our time is how national identity adapts to large-scale migration. In many Western countries, migration has reached levels that are reshaping demographics, politics and cultural debates. The issue is no longer just about economics or labor markets. It increasingly touches on how societies understand themselves.
For a long time, the dominant assumption was that liberal institutions and economic opportunity would gradually integrate newcomers while leaving national identity largely intact. But reality has proven more complicated. When migration happens on a large scale and over a short period of time, it inevitably raises questions about cultural continuity, social cohesion and the meaning of citizenship.
The challenge today is pace and scale...
For a long time, the dominant assumption was that liberal institutions and economic opportunity would gradually integrate newcomers while leaving national identity largely intact. But reality has proven more complicated. When migration happens on a large scale and over a short period of time, it inevitably raises questions about cultural continuity, social cohesion and the meaning of citizenship.
The challenge today is pace and scale...