Yonca Dege
@yoncadege.bsky.social
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📥 384
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social scientist | migration, displacement, political participation |
reposted by
Yonca Dege
Tobias Spöri
8 months ago
6/ Links: đź”— DW article:
www.dw.com/en/who-can-a...
đź”— "Who Can Participate" project (2021-2022):
www.dpart.org/en/projects/...
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Who can and can't vote in Germany's 2025 election? – DW – 01/25/2025
Germany's lack of birthright citizenship, longtime laws against dual citizenship, and long naturalization waiting times mean many yearslong and even lifetime residents cannot vote in the place they li...
https://www.dw.com/en/who-can-and-cant-vote-in-germanys-2025-election/a-71399830
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reposted by
Yonca Dege
Tobias Spöri
8 months ago
5/ - No major party is pushing for a more inclusive electoral system as politics shift right. - Our Who Can Participate study (
@dpart.bsky.social
, 2021-22, w/
@yoncadege.bsky.social
) showed that many with a migration history already engage politically and socially beyond elections.
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reposted by
Yonca Dege
Tobias Spöri
8 months ago
4/ Key takeaways from the article: - 14% of Germany’s adult population can’t vote because they lack citizenship. - Even after citizenship reform, naturalization takes 4–6+ years, delaying political participation.
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reposted by
Yonca Dege
Tobias Spöri
8 months ago
3/ In the 2025 federal election, 10 million long-term residents in Germany will be unable to vote. Despite living, working, and contributing to society, restrictive citizenship and voting laws keep them politically sidelined.
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reposted by
Yonca Dege
Tobias Spöri
8 months ago
2/ A country that relies on foreign labor across critical infrastructure should focus on better including people with a migration history. I spoke with Deutsche Welle about Germany’s democratic deficit—how millions of long-term residents with a migration history are excluded from voting. A thread 🧵
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reposted by
Yonca Dege
Tobias Spöri
8 months ago
1/ 🗳️ Germany’s opposition conservatives (CDU/CSU) just passed a proposal to drastically restrict migration—with the help of the far-right AfD. This breaks a long-standing taboo on cooperation with the party and shifts the political discourse even further to the right.
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