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Gender identity and integration: second-generation Somali immigrants navigating gender in Canada
Authors:Ahmad Karimi  Sara Thompson
Institution:1. Department of Sociology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada;2. Department of Criminology, Ryerson University, Toronto, Canada
Abstract:Many right-leaning politicians claim that normative Islamic perspectives on gender are at odds with the Western values and act as barriers to immigrant integration. Our interviews with 256 second-generation Somali-Canadians, however, suggest that gender-egalitarian identities are achieved – they are constructed and deployed by our participants to practice integration and express belonging in Canada. In this study, we move beyond analysis of attaining gender-egalitarian roles as a result of immigration and propose an understanding of gender as a form of Bourdieusian cultural capital that, depending on social values, functions as symbolic capital rendering individuals and groups as advantaged or disadvantaged. We, therefore, analyse modalities of “doing” gender as potential strategies of accumulating capital in furthering successful integration. Our study contributes to the emergent literature in migration studies that examines gender in relation to ethnic and national identities, and the extent to which it may impact integration experiences of second-generation Muslim immigrants.
Keywords:Gender  integration  second generation  Somali  Canada  multiculturalism
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