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El. knyga: Spanish Legacies: The Coming of Age of the Second Generation

  • Formatas: 336 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 12-Apr-2016
  • Leidėjas: University of California Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780520961579
  • Formatas: 336 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 12-Apr-2016
  • Leidėjas: University of California Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780520961579

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Much like the United States, Western Europe has experienced massive immigration in the last three decades. Spain, in particular, has been transformed from an immigrant-exporting country to one receiving hundreds of thousands of new immigrants. Today, almost 13 percent of the country’s population is foreign-born. Spanish Legacies, written by internationally known experts on immigration, explores how the children of immigrants the second generation are coping with the challenges of adaptation to Spanish society, comparing their situation with that experienced by their peers in the United States.

Using a rich data set based on both survey and ethnographic material, Spanish Legacies describes the experiences of growing up by the large population of second generation youths in Spain and the principal outcomes of the process from national self-identification and experiences of discrimination to educational attainment and labor market entry. The study is based on a sample of almost 7,000 second generation students interviewed in Madrid and Barcelona in 2008 and followed and re-interviewed four years later. A survey of immigrant parents, a replacement sample for lost respondents in the second survey, and a survey of native-parentage students complement this rich data set. Outcomes of the adaptation process in Spain are systematically presented in five chapters, introduced by real life histories of selected respondents drawn by the study’s ethnographic module. Systematic comparisons with results from the United States show a number of surprising similarities in the adaptation of children of immigrants in both countries, as well as differences marked by contrasting experiences of discrimination, self-identities, and ambition.



 
Preface ix
Acknowledgments xv
List of Figures
xix
List of Tables
xxi
1 Twelve Lives
1(12)
2 Theories of Second-Generation Adaptation
13(25)
3 The Recent History of Spain-Bound Immigration
38(17)
4 The Longitudinal Study of the Second Generation
55(30)
5 Immigrant Parents: Spain and the United States
85(24)
6 The Psychosocial Adaptation of the Second Generation: Self-Identities, Self-Esteem, and Related Variables
109(30)
7 The Educational Goals and Achievements of the Second Generation
139(45)
8 The Entry into the Real World: Labor Market Participation and Downward Assimilation
184(36)
9 Conclusion: Integration Policies and Their Results
220(11)
Notes 231(12)
References 243(12)
Index 255
Alejandro Portes is a best-selling UC Press author, Howard Harrison and Gabrielle S. Beck Professor of Sociology (emeritus) at Princeton University, and Research Professor at the University of Miami. He is a former president of the American Sociological Association and a member of the National Academy of Sciences. Rosa Aparicio is Senior Researcher at the Ortega y Gasset University Institute of Madrid and the current chair of the Spanish National Board for Immigrant Integration. William Haller is Associate Professor of Sociology at Clemson University; he has published widely on immigration and second-generation adaptation in the United States.