The Rise of the New Second Generation
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The Rise of the New Second Generation

Min Zhou, Carl L. Bankston

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eBook - ePub

The Rise of the New Second Generation

Min Zhou, Carl L. Bankston

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In this age of migration, more and more children are growing up in immigrant or transnational families. The "new second generation" refers to foreign-born and native-born children of immigrants who have come of age at the turn of the twenty-first century. This book is about this new generation in the worlds largest host country of international migration – the United States. Recognizing that immigration is an intergenerational phenomenon – and one that is always evolving – the authors begin by asking "Do members of the new second generation follow the same pathways taken by the 'old' second generation?" They consider the relevance of assimilation approaches to understanding the lived experiences of the new second generation, and show that the demographic characteristics of today's immigrant groups and changing social, economic, and cultural contexts require new thinking and paradigms. Ultimately, the book offers a view of how American society is shaping the life chances of members of this new second generation and how today's second generation, in turn, is shaping a new America. Designed as a rich overview for general readers and students, and as a concise summary for scholars, this book will be an essential work for all interested in contemporary issues of race, ethnicity, and migration.

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Información

Editorial
Polity
Año
2016
ISBN
9780745684727

1
Introduction: The New Second Generation Coming of Age

A rapidly globalizing economy, ever-improving means of transportation and information and communications technology (ICT), and increasingly intertwined social networks have enabled unprecedented movements of people around the world, creating highly visible concentrations of new immigrant populations in traditional or new destinations and stimulating constant transnational flows. By the count of the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, 232 million people, or 3.2 percent of the world’s population, were international migrants in 2013, compared with 154 million in 1990. The United States takes the lion’s share, hosting the largest number of international migrants at 45.8 million (UNDESA, 2013). Consequently, more and more children in our world are growing up in immigrant or transnational households. In the United States, children of immigrants account for nearly the entire growth in the US child population in the 1990s and 2000s (Fortuny, Hernandez, and Chaudry 2010). One child in five is a child of immigrants (Hernandez and Cervantes, 2011; Suárez-Orozco, Suárez-Orozco, and Todorova, 2008). Like their immigrant parents, these children are highly diverse in origins and socioeconomic backgrounds. Their economic situations, educational attainment, and health will shape their own futures while significantly influencing the futures of their host countries. In addition, new social media have impacted the lives of children in unprecedented ways, making them active participants in a global popular culture that is constantly evolving as people move faster and farther physically and virtually.
In this book, we focus on the new second generation in the nation-state that takes the lion’s share of international migrants (20 percent) in the world − the United States (UNDESA, 2013). We refer to the new second generation as the native-born or US-raised children with foreign-born parents who have arrived in the United States after the passage of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 (also known as the Hart−Celler Act). We describe and analyze the new second generation in this major migrant-receiving country and consider both country-specific and general implications of large-scale international migration for the children of immigrants coming of age in the twenty-first century.

The “old” and “new” second generation

In describing the children of immigrants as members of a “new” second generation, we make an implicit comparison to an “old” second generation growing up in the first half of the twentieth century. What was this old second generation? Does existing knowledge about the old second generation continue to be relevant for understanding the new second generation? How do the children of contemporary, or post-1965, immigrants differ from their predecessors? Do members of the new second generation follow the same pathways taken by the “old” second generation? What do these differences mean for the study of the new second generation? These are some of the primary questions we address at the outset of this book in order to situate the new second generation in American historical and comparative contexts. By placing the children of contemporary immigrants within their historical setting and identifying the different circumstances and experiences of the old and new second generations, we systematically interrogate established theories and alternative models about immigrant assimilation, integration, or incorporation.
A long tradition in US immigration studies has emphasized the question of assimilation − whether or not and how immigrants and their offspring would become like “us” natives − as central issues of concern. The assimilation perspective was the dominant way of looking at and thinking about children of immigrants in the wake of a great wave of immigration around the turn of the twentieth century (Alba and Nee, 2003). The children of this earlier massive immigration, or the “old” second generation, were critical for the nation’s assimilation project because they were the ones who underwent the Americanization campaigns in the public schools and because they and their children grew up in a country in which large-scale immigration was a thing of the past rather than something in constant flux (Bankston and Caldas, 2009).
The experience of the old second generation appeared to be a success story of assimilation. Classical assimilation theories indeed provided plausible explanations for second-generation outcomes for much of the twentieth century. In the wake of the immigration policy reform in the 1960s, the children and grandchildren of the immigrants of Southern and Eastern European origins, who were initially perceived as unassimilable and threatening to the American nation, had eventually become indistinguishably “white,” despite bumpy paths along the way (see Alba, 1985; Covello, 1972; Gans, 1979; Greeley, 1976; Mueller, 1971; Perlmann, 1988; Sassler, 2006; Warner and Srole, 1945). The thoroughness of old second-generation assimilation of European ethnic groups into a single American mainstream and culture over the course of two or three generations led policymakers and scholars concerned with immigration and immigrant incorporation to take it as the norm (see Alba and Nee, 2003; Gordon, 1964).
However, this assimilation norm has met with challenges. The US immigration policy reform of the 1960s led to a massive influx of immigrants to the country, which has lasted for half a century without any sign of slowing down. This contemporary surge far exceeds the speed, scale, duration, and intensity of the great wave of immigration at the turn of the twentieth century. For example, the number of immigrants legally admitted to the United States in the last three decades (1970−1999) of the twentieth century was about 20.3 million, compared with 18.8 million in the first three decades (1900−1929); and the number remained very high, at 14.4 million (in just 13 years), between 2000 and 2013. The influx of newcomers, largely non-European, non-Protestant, culturally varied, and socioeconomically diverse, poses significant challenges to assimilation while changing the assimilation story.
Like the immigrants who arrived earlier, many contemporary immigrants are struggling at the host society’s bottom. Even though they hope that with hard work and determination they can move up in society, they still find not only their own pathways to upward social mobility blocked but also those of their children who have been thoroughly acculturated. But the classic picture of the “huddled masses” is less characteristic of contemporary immigration. In fact, many contemporary immigrants are able to obtain well-paying jobs in the mainstream labor market, open their own businesses beyond the scale of mom-and-pop stores, and purchase homes in affluent urban neighborhoods or middle-class suburbs upon arrival, while still speaking little or heavily accented English and maintaining their ethnic distinctiveness. The diverse socioeconomic backgrounds and initial resettlement patterns of the immigrant generation, or the first generation, shape the prospects of mobility in the new second generation, which renders classical assimilation theories inadequate.
A changing receiving context further complicates the process of assimilation. At the turn of the twenty-first century, the American economy that the children of immigrants face is quite different from the one that confronted the children of earlier immigration. Instead of an industrializing, factory-based economy, the American economy is approaching the shape of an hourglass, with labor-intensive, low-skilled jobs at one end and knowledgeintensive, high-skilled professions at the other. The manufacturing sector, consisting of solid blue-collar work which used to assist the mobility of low-skilled immigrants, has either shrunk or moved offshore, leaving a very large gap in the middle of the social mobility ladder and leading to more diverse pathways to different segments of American society. Those aspiring to attain middle-class status may have to work much harder than their predecessors because they would need at least a college education to enter their desired professions. Those fully acculturated may lack the necessary credentials and job skills to take up professional employment and may thus seek alternative channels, which can lead in vastly different directions, including one ending up nowhere (Portes and Zhou, 1993).
American society, moreover, has become more open than ever before; Americanization has given way to multiculturalism. Assimilation is often regarded as politically incorrect. In the past thirty-some years, in particular, “assimilation” has become a highly controversial and politically charged term in public discourse and scholarly work. This change is partly due to the word’s association with the ideal of Anglo-conformity, or “the melting pot,” and forced Americanization, partly due to the daunting reality of assimilation failure and increased racial/ethnic inequality, and partly due to the effects of ethnic consciousness movements that promote multiculturalism. However, the debate about assimilation has its historical roots. It is largely derived from the negative views of the melting pot and forced Americanization experienced by the old second generation and rejuvenated in the post-civil rights movement environment surrounding the great wave of immigration that produced the new second generation.
Thus the questions relevant to the new second generation, such as what does it mean to assimilate, when does assimilation occur, what kinds of assimilation promote the educational achievement and economic success, and whether the concept of assimilation ever captures the multivariate experiences of contemporary immigrants, are never far from any of the issues facing the old second generation. Behind all of these questions, we can see implicit comparisons with earlier children of immigrants and reactions, shaped by the preoccupations of contemporary society, to the experiences of that earlier generation.

Central issues of concern

The lives and destinies of members of the new second generation are too complex and varied to be explained by a single linear process of gradually dissolving into the cultural and socioeconomic mainstream of the host society. Studies of this new second generation have flourished since the early 1990s, culminating in numerous publications on the subject, including such seminal works as: The New Second Generation (Portes, 1996), Made in America (Olsen, 1997), Growing Up American (Zhou and Bankston, 1998), Black Identities (Waters, 1999), Legacies (Portes and Rumbaut, 2001), Children of Immigration (Suárez-Orozco and Suárez-Orozco, 2001), The Second Generation (Min, 2002), Italians Then, Mexicans Now: Immigrant Origins and the Second-Generation Progress, 1890 to 2000 (Perlmann, 2005), Inheriting the City (Kasinitz et al., 2008), Learning a New Land (Suárez-Orozco, Suárez-Orozco, and Todorova, 2008), Generations of Exclusion (Telles and Ortiz, 2009), Divided by Borders (Dreby, 2010), The Children of Immigrants at School (Alba and Holdaway, 2013), and The Asian American Achievement Paradox (Lee and Zhou, 2015), to name just a few. Most of the prior studies have focused on a specific immigrant group or on a few specific groups in one or several major migrant-receiving metropolises, such as New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, and Miami, and tackled major issues of urgency and significance concerning the assimilation, or incorporation, process in depth and breadth. These empirical studies have yielded fruitful results to enhance understanding and offer important lessons for theory and policy.
In this book, we take an empirical approach to the century-old issues of assimilation − the extent to which members of the second generation are moving up in society comparable to or beyond their parents’ and host society’s expectations, and the extent to which they are losing or retaining identification with their ancestral backgrounds − as the most fundamental problems regarding who they are and how they fit into American society. By synthesizing the empirical findings and theoretical models developed in prior research, we present a broader picture of the realities of the new second generation and of the families, ethnic communities, and gateway institutions with which members of this generation intimately interact. We also examine the mechanisms leading to success, or failure, of assimilation that entails segmented outcomes.
In the chapters that follow, we first compare and contrast major immigration waves to the United States and different patterns of second-generation assimilation from a historic-comparative perspective. Second, we critically review and assess the theories that explain the processes and outcomes of assimilation, paying special attention to how classical assimilation theories explain the processes and outcomes of assimilation and how alternative theories have been developed to modify or challenge classical theories. Third, we address assimilation’s discontents by synthesizing empirical findings in the existing literature and presenting our own data analysis on social mobility, identity formation, and “America becoming.”

Organization of the book

Treating immigration as an intergenerational phenomenon, and following the view that contemporary approaches to the new second generation have been conditioned by the historical experiences of the old second generation, we begin by considering the two great immigration waves that produced two distinctive generations of the children of immigrants. In chapter 2, we make explicit the comparisons and draw portraits of children in immigrant families at the turn of the twentieth century and at the turn of the twenty-first century, based primarily on immigration data and US Censuses. We first briefly describe why people migrate. We then offer a clear and concise account of how today’s second generation differs from that of the past, focusing on context of reception, race, countries of origin, family socioeconomic status (SES), home language use, school attendance, and places of settlement. We emphasize the diversity of contemporary children of immigrants. We show tha...

Índice

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Dedication
  5. Acknowledgments
  6. 1 Introduction: The New Second Generation Coming of Age
  7. 2 Immigration: Past and Present Trends
  8. 3 Assimilation: Classical and Neo-Classical Theories
  9. 4 Segmented Assimilation
  10. 5 Social Mobility
  11. 6 Identity Formation: Ethnicization and Racialization
  12. 7 Twenty-First-Century America: New Destinations, New Experiences, and Future Prospects
  13. References
  14. Index
  15. End User License Agreement
Estilos de citas para The Rise of the New Second Generation

APA 6 Citation

Zhou, M., & Bankston, C. (2016). The Rise of the New Second Generation (1st ed.). Wiley. Retrieved from https://www.perlego.com/book/1535834/the-rise-of-the-new-second-generation-pdf (Original work published 2016)

Chicago Citation

Zhou, Min, and Carl Bankston. (2016) 2016. The Rise of the New Second Generation. 1st ed. Wiley. https://www.perlego.com/book/1535834/the-rise-of-the-new-second-generation-pdf.

Harvard Citation

Zhou, M. and Bankston, C. (2016) The Rise of the New Second Generation. 1st edn. Wiley. Available at: https://www.perlego.com/book/1535834/the-rise-of-the-new-second-generation-pdf (Accessed: 14 October 2022).

MLA 7 Citation

Zhou, Min, and Carl Bankston. The Rise of the New Second Generation. 1st ed. Wiley, 2016. Web. 14 Oct. 2022.