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Grenzen und Migration im heutigen Europa

    Ebrahim Afsah

Geistes-, sozial- und kulturwissenschaftlicher Anzeiger, 159. Jahrgang 2024, pp. 117-158, 2025/04/16

159. Jahrgang 2024
Borders Matter: Rereading the Rhine-Danube Limes and the End of the Roman Empire

doi: 10.1553/anzeiger159-1s117

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doi:10.1553/anzeiger159-1s117

Abstract

Conditions existing towards the end of the Roman Empire difer fundamentally from those characterising the contemporary challenge of mass migration, encumbering historical analogies. Major diferences in at least five crucial areas (demography, economy, participation, military, and zones of contact) make it apparent that today’s Europe is not Rome. But the warning posed by the Empire’s eventual inability to integrate Germanic tribal migrants appears timely with respect to the inability of contemporary liberal welfare states to integrate ever larger numbers of particularly Muslim migrants. Imported cultural and religious notions at odds with the liberal constitutional acquis necessitate uncomfortable ideational and practical responses, instead of wishful thinking. The value of history in this debate is to highlight self-deception and the dangers of complacency.

Keywords: migration; Islam; integration; liberalism; militant democracy