Article ‘‘They want us out’’: Urban regeneration and the limits of integration in the Danish welfare state Mette-Louise E Johansen Aarhus University, Denmark Steffen B Jensen Aalborg University, Denmark; DIGNITY-Danish Institute Against Torture, Denmark Abstract This article explores how a group of Palestinian families perceive and cope with urban regeneration in Denmark’s largest public housing project, Gellerupparken. The neigh- borhood is publicly known as a criminal hotspot, politically defined as a migrant ‘‘ghetto’’, and targeted by state policies as the other in need of change. The aim of the article is to show how urban regeneration is broader than the transformation of physical space and includes the perceived need to reform residents through a host of biopolitical interventions. While most policy work aim at establishing trusting and collaborative state-citizen relations, the perspective of the residents in Gellerupparken illuminate that the social effects of urban regeneration can be seen as paradoxical ones. Although Danish gentrification policies resonate with some sections of the residents, and can even count on the active participation of many residents in the self-adminis- tration of their neighborhood, the state’s interventions only seem to strengthen its conflicts with other residents, as well as enhance the distance between resident groups. In this way, the article explores what we call the limits to integration as the practices of the families in our study run counter to embodied notions of Danishness within the welfare state. Keywords Welfare state, marginalized minorities, urban regeneration, public housing, Denmark Critique of Anthropology 2017, Vol. 37(3) 297–316 ! The Author(s) 2017 Reprints and permissions: sagepub.co.uk/journalsPermissions.nav DOI: 10.1177/0308275X17719990 journals.sagepub.com/home/coa Corresponding author: Mette-Louise E Johansen, Department of Anthropology, Aarhus University, Moesgaard Alle ´ 20, 8270 Hoejbjerg, Denmark. Email: mlej@cas.au.dk