Migrants and their children in Britain : generational change in patterns of ethnic minority integration
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Migrants and their children in Britain : generational change in patterns of ethnic minority integration
(Ethnic and racial studies / series editors, Martin Bulmer and John Solomos)
Routledge, 2016, c2015
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Note
"First published 2015 by Routledge, ... first issued in paperback 2016"--T.p. verso
"The chapters in this book were originally published in Ethnic and Racial Studies, volume 37, issue 1 (January 2014)"--Page ix
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Do second-generation ethnic minorities, those born and brought up in Britain, increasingly adopt British attitudes, values and ways or life, or do they, as some commentators have claimed, remain isolated from the mainstream? This study maps the extent of generational change among Britain's ethnic minority population and explores the underlying processes involved. It asks whether generational change has been in the direction of greater integration, or whether some minorities been slower to integrate, perhaps as a result of the prejudice and discrimination from the white British that they have encountered or because of desires to maintain ethnic values and resist Western practices.
The study draws on the most recent and most authoritative British data to answer these questions. Chapter authors include leading authorities both from Britain and America, including Mary Waters (Harvard), Lucinda Platt (LSE) and Anthony Heath, CBE (Oxford and Manchester) as well as a new generation of young scholars. It will be essential reading both for students and scholars working on ethnic relations and for policy-makers and the wider public interested in questions of social cohesion, multiculturalism and integration.
This book was originally published as a special issue of Ethnic and Racial Studies.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction: Patterns of generational change: convergent, reactive or emergent? Anthony Heath 2. Defining difference: the role of immigrant generation and race in American and British immigration studies Mary C. Waters 3. Explaining intergenerational variations in English language acquisition and ethnic language attrition Meenakshi Parameshwaran 4. Is there assimilation in minority groups' national, ethnic and religious identity? Lucinda Platt 5. Generation, ethnic and religious diversity in friendship choice: exploring interethnic close ties in Britain Raya Muttarak 6. Immigrant generation, religiosity and civic engagement in Britain Siobhan McAndrew and David Voas 7. The democratic engagement of Britain's ethnic minorities David Sanders, Stephen D. Fisher, Anthony Heath and Maria Sobolewska 8. Ethno-religious minorities and labour market integration: generational advancement or decline? Sin Yi Cheung 9. Has multiculturalism failed in Britain? Anthony Heath and Neli Demireva
by "Nielsen BookData"