Research
Database

This constantly growing database accumulates and structures
relevant knowledge in the field of migration.

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(Re)Contextualizing English language teaching in Thailand to address racialized and ‘Othered’ inequities in ELT

Authors Natakorn Satienchayakorn, Rachel Grant
Year 2022
Journal Name Language, Culture and Curriculum
Citations (WoS) 2
10203 Journal Article

Host Culture Adoption and Ethnic Retention among Turkish Immigrants and their Descendants in France, Germany, and the Netherlands

Principal investigator Ruud Koopmans (Principal Investigator)
Description
"Theoretical background and objectives The project contributes to societal and scientific debate by examining the relationship between integration policies and the socio-cultural integration of immigrants in three European countries that have pursued contrasting integration policies: France, Germany and the Netherlands. Socio-cultural integration is treated as a two-dimensional concept consisting of the degree of host culture adoption and the degree of ethnic retention. Following Berry (1997) these two dimensions are seen as – at least potentially – independent. Both dimensions are measured on the basis of four indicators. The degree of host culture adoption is measured as identification with the host country, host country language proficiency, host country language usage and social contacts with natives. The degree of ethnic retention is measured as identification with Turks, Turkish language proficiency, identification with Muslims and the observance of Islamic religious rules (halal diet, participation in Ramadan, mosque visits and headscarf wearing). The project tests several theories of immigrant assimilation in a cross-national perspective: theories em­phasis­ing material costs and benefits of retention and adoption, which claim that assimilation pressures will lead to adoption of the host culture and multicultural policies will promote ethnic retention; acculturative stress theories that pose that adoption is less likely to occur if it is seen as requiring the rejection of the culture of origin; and reactive ethnicity theories, which assume that immigrants withdraw in their ethnic cultures if they face assimilation pressures. In addition, the project pays special attention to naturalisation policies: Based on the widespread assumption that easily accessible citizenship promotes socio-cultural integration, two hypotheses are tested. First, whether naturalised immigrants display higher levels of socio-cultural integration than non-naturalised immigrants. Second, whether immigrants in countries with few preconditions for naturalisation show higher levels of socio-cultural integration. Research design, data and methodology Most previous comparative studies have not been able to control sufficiently for compositional effects related to the timing of immigration and the national and regional composition of immigrant populations. By choosing a quasi-experimental design, the project sought to eliminate such composition effects as far as possible. Therefore, original data were collected based on a telephone survey in the three countries that targeted a selected group of Turkish immigrants and their direct offspring originating in two rural regions of Turkey, who migrated before 1975. Thus, the sample (n = 1 000) excludes all follow-up migration of Turkish refugees and marriage migrants, which occurred to varying degrees in the three countries, and ensures that we are comparing similar immigrants in the three countries, and not predominantly urban Turkish guest workers from Istanbul in one country to Kurdish refugees in another country. All respondents had the option to answer the questionnaire either in Turkish or in their host-country language. The survey data were analysed using multivariate regression techniques, and took into account a range of individual-level control variables as well as the local density of the Turkish immigrant population. The quantitative findings were corroborated and refined with almost 90 additional in-depth interviews. Findings Results show that ethnic retention is strongest in the Netherlands, where multicultural policies were long prevalent, while host culture adoption is strongest in the French context, which has more strongly emphasised assimilation, at least where participation in the public realm is concerned. On the individual level, there is a negative relationship between ethnic retention and host culture adoption, which persists after controlling for relevant background variables. Naturalisation is positively associated with socio-cultural integration only in those countries—France and Germany—that have traditionally required a certain degree of cultural assimilation from their new citizens. Regarding country differences, the analyses reveal that Turkish immigrants in France show higher levels of host culture adoption on all four indicators. For host-country identification, they share this position with Dutch Turks. Taken together, these results provide no support for reactive ethnicity theories, as ethnic retention was strongest in the Netherlands, where citizenship policies have been most inclusive. They do provide support for a combination of material cost/benefit perspectives and acculturative stress perspectives, as neither a lack of incentives for adoption of the host culture (as was long the case in the Netherlands) nor very restrictive citizenship policies that promote an ethnically thick conception of citizenship (as long prevalent in Germany) have been successful in seducing immigrants to adopt the host culture. The results show that limited cultural assimilation conditions tied to an otherwise inclusive notion of citizenship (as in France) may be more helpful in promoting socio-cultural integration, but they also demonstrate that the allowance of dual nationality does not have the negative effects that are sometimes ascribed to it."
Year 2004
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
10204 Project

Methodological Aspects of Recent Empirical Research on Academic Migration

Year 2014
Journal Name Studia Migracyjne - Przegląd Polonijny
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
10205 Journal Article

Rejecting the racial contract: Charles Mills and critical race theory

Authors George Lipsitz
Year 2023
Journal Name Race Ethnicity and Education
10206 Journal Article

Race in Cuba: Essays on the Revolution and Racial Inequality

Authors Jorge L. Giovannetti
Year 2015
Journal Name NWIG-NEW WEST INDIAN GUIDE-NIEUWE WEST-INDISCHE GIDS
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
10207 Journal Article

Hispanic/Anglo-American differences in attributions to paralinguistic behavior

Authors Rosita Daskal Albert, Gayle L. Nelson
Year 1993
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTERCULTURAL RELATIONS
10210 Journal Article

Race and democracy: The controversy over racial vote dilution

Authors A Altman
Year 1998
Journal Name PHILOSOPHY & PUBLIC AFFAIRS
10212 Journal Article

EXERCISING 'RACE' THROUGH THE CORONATION PHYSICAL TRAINING COMPETITION

Authors Francois J. Cleophas, Floris J. G. Van der Merwe
Year 2012
Journal Name SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL FOR RESEARCH IN SPORT PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND RECREATION
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
10214 Journal Article

From nation to population: the racialisation of ‘Métis’ in the Canadian census†

Authors CHRIS ANDERSEN
Year 2008
Journal Name Nations and Nationalism
Citations (WoS) 32
10216 Journal Article

On the sidelines: Sex and racial segregation in television sports broadcasting

Authors BT Coventry
Year 2004
Journal Name SOCIOLOGY OF SPORT JOURNAL
10219 Journal Article

Workplace Racial Discrimination and Middle Class Vulnerability

Authors Vincent J. Roscigno, Lisa M. Williams, Reginald A. Byron
Year 2012
Journal Name American Behavioral Scientist
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
10220 Journal Article

Victim and Suspect Race and the Police Clearance of Sexual Assault

Authors Michele Stacey, Bradley T. Brick, Kimberly H. Martin
Year 2016
Journal Name Race and Justice
Citations (WoS) 2
10221 Journal Article

The compassion strategy - Race and the gender gap in campaign 2000

Authors VL Hutchings, NA Valentino, TS Philpot, ...
Year 2004
Journal Name Public Opinion Quarterly
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
10222 Journal Article

Parenting in a New Land: Specialized Services for Immigrant and Refugee Families in the USA

Authors Filomena M. Critelli
Year 2014
Journal Name JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION AND INTEGRATION
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
10224 Journal Article

Economic Integration among Children of Israeli Immigrants in the United States

Authors Yinon Cohen, Yitchak Haberfeld
Year 2003
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 6
10226 Journal Article

Unintended Consequences in Refugee Resettlement: Post-War Ukrainian Refugee Immigration to Canada

Authors Lubomyr Y. Luciuk
Year 1986
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 10
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
10227 Journal Article

Finding Black Joy in a World Where We Are Not Safe

Authors Barbara Harris Combs
Year 2023
Journal Name Sociology of Race and Ethnicity
10228 Journal Article

Missing Colonies in American Myths of Slavery: Where Is the “Deep North” in Sociology Textbooks?

Authors Susan C. Pearce, Rachael Lee
Year 2021
Journal Name Sociology of Race and Ethnicity
10229 Journal Article

Retro Racism: <i>Colonial Ignorance and Racialized Affective Consumption in Danish Public Culture</i>

Authors Mathias Danbolt
Year 2017
Journal Name Nordic Journal of Migration Research
10230 Journal Article

FROM SHARED DEMOGRAPHIC CATEGORIES TO COMMON POLITICAL DESTINIES

Authors Taeku Lee
Year 2007
Journal Name Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race
10231 Journal Article

Unintended, inexorable - The production of environmental inequalities in Santa Clara County, California

Authors A Szasz, M Meuser
Year 2000
Journal Name American Behavioral Scientist
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
10232 Journal Article

Embodying Racism: Race, Rhinoplasty, and Self-Esteem in Venezuela

Authors Lauren E. Gulbas
Year 2013
Journal Name Qualitative Health Research
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
10234 Journal Article

Research-Policy Dialogues in Denmark

Authors Martin Bak Jørgensen
Book Title Integrating Immigrants in Europe
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
10235 Book Chapter

Social Networks and Support, Gender, and Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Hypertension Among Older Adults

Authors Bridget K. Gorman, Jeremy R. Porter
Year 2011
Journal Name Population Research and Policy Review
Citations (WoS) 3
10236 Journal Article

Op weg naar 2030. Migratie: een toekomstverkenning

Authors The Dutch Advisory Committee on Migration Affairs (Adviescommissie voor Vreemdelingenzaken, ACVZ)
Description
In deze toekomstverkenning biedt de Adviescommissie voor Vreemdelingenzaken (ACVZ) handvatten om met de onzekere toekomst van migratie om te gaan. Onder meer klimaatverandering, conflicten in de landen rond Europa, de bevolkingsgroei in Afrika, de toekomst van de Europese Unie, innovatie en de sociale cohesie in Nederland passeren de revue als relevante factoren voor migratie. Op basis daarvan schetst dit rapport vier verschillende mogelijke ‘toekomsten’ waarin een migratiebeleid ontwikkeld kan worden. We zijn het in Nederland echter niet met elkaar eens over de richting van het migratiebeleid. Sommige Nederlanders vinden dat migratiebeleid vooral het economisch belang van Nederland moet dienen, anderen dat migratiebeleid er is om vluchtelingen en migranten te beschermen en weer anderen vinden juist dat migratie een last is voor onze samenleving en daarom zoveel mogelijk moet worden beperkt. De ACVZ heeft daarom drie verschillende beleidsscenario’s geschreven, die ieder één van deze perspectieven als uitgangspunt heeft. Uit de studie komt duidelijk naar voren dat de toekomstbestendigheid van de beleidsscenario’s erg afhankelijk is van de vraag hoe de (onbekende) toekomst eruit komt te zien. Voor een zinvol beleid zal zodoende een voortdurende afstemming van het beleid aan de omgeving noodzakelijk zijn. Aandachtspunten die volgens de ACVZ de komende 12 jaar prioriteit verdienen zijn onder meer: 1) Het aanpakken van de grondoorzaken van gedwongen migratie; 2) Het bijdragen aan hoogwaardige en toekomstgerichte opvang in de regio; 3) Een deugdelijke grensbewaking; 4) Een goed functionerende internationale samenwerking; 5) De gevolgen voor de sociale cohesie in de samenleving; 6) Participatie in de samenleving van migranten die toegelaten zijn; 7) De migratiebestendigheid van het sociale zekerheidsstelsel; 8) Een open en eenduidige communicatie van de overheid
Year 2018
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
10237 Report

Understanding what students bring to the classroom: Moderators of the effects of diversity courses on student attitudes.

Authors Elizabeth R. Cole, Kim A. Case, Desdamona Rios, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Cultural Diversity &amp; Ethnic Minority Psychology
10243 Journal Article

Black Women's NGOs in Brazil

Authors Sonia Beatriz dos Santos
Year 2009
Journal Name SOCIEDADE E CULTURA
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
10244 Journal Article

Law and the cultural production of race and racialized systems of oppression - Early American court cases

Authors RD Coates
Year 2003
Journal Name American Behavioral Scientist
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
10247 Journal Article

Race, politics, and perceptions of anti-Black and anti-White discrimination over time

Authors Navanté Peacock, Monica Biernat, Monica Biernat
Year 2021
Journal Name Group Processes &amp; Intergroup Relations
Citations (WoS) 5
10248 Journal Article

Harlan's Dissent: Citizenship, Education, and the Color-Conscious Constitution

Authors Douglas S. Reed
Year 2021
Journal Name RSF-THE RUSSELL SAGE JOURNAL OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCES
Citations (WoS) 2
10249 Journal Article
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