1. Re-Placing Whiteness: Where's the Beef?
- Author
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Logan, John R.
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL classes , *IMMIGRANTS , *SOCIAL groups , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL mobility , *SOCIAL status - Abstract
The article discusses about the issue of "Re-Placing Whiteness," which is an amalgam of two very different papers about immigrants' residential patterns. Assimilation theory anticipates progress toward the mainstream as immigrants and especially their children experience social mobility, including shifts in the kinds of neighborhoods where they live. Of course, assimilation is not the only possible trajectory. A longstanding counterclaim is that American society obstructs the mobility of some groups, and a more recent argument is that some groups may not value residential assimilation as a goal. But from any theoretical perspective, there are good reasons not to focus solely on residence in white suburban neighborhoods as indicators of advancement. It would be constructive to offer a theory to explain why some early arrivals turn out to be very highly concentrated.
- Published
- 2005
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