Foreword
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations and Acronyms
Introduction
Part I Integrating Difference
1 Comparative Xenophobia
2 South African Perspectives on Xenophobia
3 Youth Voices
Aim and Methodology ? An Ethnography of Township Schools ? How Students View Foreigners
4 Falling from Grace
Shifting Views on “Mandelaland” ? Reflections on Mandela ? Patriarchy, Sexual Violence, and HIV/AIDS ? Crime and Punishment ? Corruption and Consumption
? Reracialization, Affirmative Action, and Black Economic Empowerment ? Descent into Zimbabwe? ? Popular Sentiment versus a Liberal Constitution
Part II Variations of Migration Policies: Africa, Germany, and Canada
5 Settler Colonialism
Two Types of Colonialism ? Founding Myths and Intergroup Attitudes ? Metropolitan/Settler Relations
6 Xenophobia in Germany
The Case of Roma/Sinti ? Muslims as Enemies ? Capitalist versus Communist Xenophobia ? Conclusion
7 Multicultural Canada as an Alternative?
Canadian Identities and Cultural Traditions ? How to Select Immigrants ? Opportunistic Multiculturalism
Part III Political Literacy
8 Xenophobia and Political Literacy
Comparing Political Education in Multiethnic Societies ? Political Literacy as Strategy to Combat Xenophobia ? Nation, Nationalism, Ethnicity, Ethnocentrism, and Critical Patriotism ? Cosmopolitan Consciousness
9 Theorizing Xenophobia
Conclusion: Alternatives and Global Trends
Appendices
Autobiography I: Navigating “Difference”: Insiders, Outsiders, and
Contending Identities (Kogila Moodley)
Autobiography II: Controversies: Peacemaking in Divided Societies
(Heribert Adam)
References
Index of Names