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Saving face: the emotional costs of the Asian immigrant family myth
Authors:Kelly H. Chong
Affiliation:1. Department of Sociology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, USAkchong@ku.edu
Abstract:Access to resources through ethnic group membership is often presumed to affect the intensity of ethnic identification. We examine this premise using survey data on three ethnic groups in Mauritius: Creoles, Hindus, and Muslims. Two key findings emerge from our research. First, access to material resources explains only a modest proportion of total variation in ethnic identification within each group. Second, the resources that affect ethnic identification differ significantly across groups. Access to political goods through group membership affects Hindu identification but is unrelated to ethnic identification among Creoles or Muslims. Conversely, access to economic goods affects Creole and Muslim identification but has no effect on Hindu identification. Explaining these group differences leads us beyond a basic means–ends instrumentalist model to identify conditions that likely mediate the relationship between individual interests and collective identification including the divisibility of economic goods relative to political goods in Mauritius.
Keywords:Ethnic identity  social identification  competition  instrumentalism  ethnic mobilization  Mauritius
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