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This chapter examines the way in which the Holocaust has been brought into conversation with understandings of the modern world, with a strong focus on historical and sociological accounts (though recognizing the place of the Holocaust in postmodern literary and critical theory.) It shows the multiple ways in which concepts of modernization, modernity, and the modern have been deployed, be it to establish the Holocaust’s paradigmatic or normative character, or the reverse. It illustrates the paradoxical character of efforts to highlight the Holocaust’s distinctiveness while harnessing it to a pervasive and generic “modernity.”
Taking an empirical approach, this chapter demonstrates how terribly complex it is to conceive of a ‘successful’ investment migration programme. I walk the reader through the menu of investment migration programme design options, exposing the difficulties related to pretty much all of the available choices to help us grasp the sheer complexity of the issue.
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