<b>NOTE:</b>You are purchasing a<b>standalone</b>product; MySocLab(R) does not come packaged with this content. If you would like to purchase both the physical text and MySocLab search for 013412698X / 9780134126982<b><i>Race and Ethnicity in the United States plus MySocLab for Race and Ethnicity -
Immigration and Opportuntity: Race, Ethnicity, and Employment in the United States
β Scribed by Frank D. Bean (editor), Stephanie Bell-Rose (editor)
- Publisher
- Russell Sage Foundation
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 432
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The American dream of equal opportunity and social mobility still holds a powerful appeal for the many immigrants who arrive in this country each year. but if immigrant success stories symbolize the fulfillment of the American dream, the persistent inequality suffered by native-born African Americans demonstrates the dream's limits. Although the experience of blacks and immigrants in the United States are not directly comparable, their fates are connected in ways that are seldom recognized. Immigration and Opportunity brings together leading sociologists and demographers to present a systematic account of the many ways in which immigration affects the labor market experiences of native-born African Americans. With the arrival of large numbers of nonwhite immigrants in recent decades, blacks now represent less than 50 percent of the U.S. minority population. Immigration and Opportunity reveals how immigration has transformed relations between minority populations in the United States, creating new forms of labor market competition between native and immigrant minorities. Recent immigrants have concentrated in a handful of port-of-entry cities, breaking up established patterns of residential segregation,and, in some cases, contributing to the migration of native blacks out of these cities. Immigrants have secured many of the occupational niches once dominated by blacks and now pass these jobs on through ethnic hiring networks that exclude natives. At the same time, many native-born blacks find jobs in the public sector, which is closed to those immigrants who lack U.S. citizenship. While recent immigrants have unquestionably brought economic and cultural benefits to U.S. society, this volume makes it clear that the costs of increased immigration falls particularly heavily upon those native-born groups who are already disadvantaged. Even as large-scale immigration transforms the racial and ethnic make-up of U.S. societyβforcing us to think about race and ethnicity in new waysβit demands that we pay renewed attention to the entrenched problems of racial disadvantage that still beset native-born African Americans.
β¦ Table of Contents
Cover
Title Page, Copyright
Contents
Contributors
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Immigration and Its Relation to Race and Ethnicity in the United States
Chapter 1. Immigration, Spatial and Economic Change, and African American Employment
Chapter 2. Mexican Immigration, Occupational Niches, and Labor-Market Competition: Evidence from Los Angeles, Chicago, and Atlanta, 1970 to 1990
Chapter 3. Ethnic Concentrations and Labor-Market Opportunities
Chapter 4. Entrepreneurship and Economic Progress in the 1990s: A Comparative Analysis of Immigrants and African Americans
Chapter 5. Minority Niches and Immigrant Enclaves in New York and Los Angeles: Trends and Impacts
Chapter 6. West Indians and African Americans at Work: Structural Differences and Cultural Stereotypes
Chapter 7. Network, Bureaucracy, and Exclusion: Recruitment and Selection in an Immigrant Metropolis / Roger Waldinger
Chapter 8. Newly Emerging Hispanic Communities in the United States: A Spatial Analysis of Settlement Patterns, In-Migration Fields, and Social Receptivity
Chapter 9. New Black Migration Patterns in the United States: Are They Affected by Recent Immigration?
Chapter 10. The Impact of Immigration on Residential Segregation
Chapter 11. How Immigration and Intermarriage Affect the Racial and Ethnic Composition of the U.S. Population
Index
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xiv, 223 p. : 24 cm
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