Ethnicity and naturalization |
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Authors: | Philip Q Yang |
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Institution: | Lecturer, Department of Sociology , University of California , Los Angeles, 405 Hilgard Avenue, Los Angeles, CA, 90024–1551, USA |
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Abstract: | This article examines whether or not ethnicity has an independent effect on the likelihood of immigrant naturalization using the Public Use Microdata Sample PUMS] data from the 1980 US Census. Ethnic differences in the propensity to become naturalized US citizens were analysed among four panethnic groups and across thirty‐three major ethnic groups. The results point to the continuing significance of ethnicity in the naturalization process. However, the effect of ethnicity is not as strong as the effects of other structural factors. Three hypotheses that attempt to explain ethnic differences in the propensity for naturalization were also tested. The evidence lends strong support to the forced self‐protection hypothesis, but it provides no support for the discrimination hypothesis and the cultural differences hypothesis. |
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Keywords: | Nationalism ‘other’ Greece Macedonia |
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