Economic Migration and Social Exclusion : The case of Tunisians in Italy in the 1980s and 1990s Faïçal Daly and Rohit Barot Department of Sociology University of Bristol 1. Introduction The purpose of this chapter is to explain the Tunisian migration to Italy in the 1980s and 1990s in the context of economic and political changes which have taken place both in Italy and Tunisia. It will examine the demographic characteristics of the migrants in Tunisia and explain economic and political factors which made Italy an attractive destination for work and settlement by Tunisian workers. This account will also focus on Tunisian settlement and location in the Italian political economy. A number of European states like Germany and Switzerland have implemented policies which recognise the need for the presence of temporary workers with minimum possible social cost to the receiving society. The case of the Tunisian migrant workers in Italy clearly shows the contradiction between the need for the labour power and the unwillingness of the state to make a proper social provision for them. It is this contradiction between economic inclusion and social exclusion which is a central theme of this chapter . Recent history of international migration clearly shows that Italy, even before the days of its unification as a nation state, has sent out millions of Italians round the world from Argentina to Australia. The presence of Italian communities in these far flung locations is equally matched by Italian migration to North America as well as to various states in Europe. Out-migration from Italy in past two centuries has been an important part of modern Italian history and its economic development. The Italian state has consistently defended and promoted the civil rights for Italian settlers everywhere. While in-migration from the Third World countries to Britain, Germany and France occurred between 1950s and 1980s, in migration to Italy on a similar scale took place mainly in 1980s and 1990s and it is this period which constitutes the focus of discussion in this chapter. The methodology that is deployed in this chapter is as follows. First of all, the authors explain Tunisian migration to Italy and its economic and social consequences. The first part of the chapter concentrates on the factors which account for Tunisian migration to Italy. Some features of Tunisian migrants and their settlement in Italy forms the second part of this narrative. One of the central arguments in this chapter concerns racism and social exclusion that forms the third section before a conclusion that analyses the dynamic between the integration of Tunisian migrants in the Italian political economy and their exclusion from some dimensions of the civil society. 2. What drove Tunisian migrants to Italy? Since 1973, for the first time in its modern history, Italy has ceased to be Europe’s largest supplier of migrant labour. Instead, the country is importing cheap labour from its previous African colonies (Eritrea, Ethiopia and Somalia) and from its neighbouring countries, in particular, North Africa (Algeria, Egypt, Morocco and Tunisia). Although Tunisia was the first Roman colony after the defeat of Carthage in 146 BC in the Third 1