Strangers No More
Immigration and the Challenges of Integration in North America and Western Europe
Nancy Foner author Richard Alba author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Princeton University Press
Published:28th Mar '17
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
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This insightful book examines immigrant integration in key Western countries, highlighting the experiences of low-status newcomers and their families. Strangers No More provides a rich analysis.
In Strangers No More, authors Richard Alba and Nancy Foner provide a comprehensive analysis of immigrant integration across several key Western countries. This groundbreaking work focuses on low-status newcomers and their children, shedding light on their experiences in four critical European nations: France, Germany, Great Britain, and the Netherlands. Additionally, the authors extend their examination across the Atlantic to the United States and Canada, offering a systematic and data-rich comparison that reveals both the progress these immigrants make and the barriers they encounter.
The book explores a variety of institutions, including labor markets, neighborhoods, educational systems, and political structures, to understand the multifaceted challenges faced by immigrants. Alba and Foner delve into controversial topics such as religion, race, identity, and intermarriage, providing new insights into the dynamics of immigrant integration. They analyze why, in Western Europe, religious divides are more pronounced, while racial obstacles are more significant in the United States.
Moreover, Strangers No More addresses pressing issues like residential segregation and economic inequality, particularly for the second generation of immigrants. The authors evaluate various perspectives on successful immigrant integration, including national models and the historical context of Canada and the United States as settler societies. This book is essential reading for anyone interested in understanding the evolving landscape of immigration and its implications for the future of Western societies.
Honorable Mention for the 2017 ENMISA Distinguished Book Award, Ethnicity, Nationalism, and Migration Section the International Studies Association "A welcome stocktaking of how 'low-status' immigrants have fared in North America and several Western European countries. The value added by this volume is the compact compilation of comparative data on key domains of integration, from the labor market to intermarriage."--Christian Joppke, American Journal of Sociology "Richard Alba and Nancy Foner have written what will undoubtedly become the "go-to' book for comparisons of immigration on both sides of the Atlantic. Clearly written, meticulously researched, and insightfully analyzed, Strangers No More: Immigration and the Challenges of Integration in North America and Western Europe helps readers easily capture the broad mechanisms driving migration and integration today."--Peggy Levitt, Contemporary Sociology "Richard Alba and Nancy Foner took on an impossible task: to write a comprehensive, but also empirically grounded, account of the integration of people they call 'low-status' migrants, across the main distinct fields of integration, covering the experiences of the four main Western European immigration countries and the US and Canada, all within a country comparative framework. Given this high ambition with regard to substance and scope, this book stands unrivalled and unmatched as an achievement. Few scholars possess the depth of knowledge or mastery of the arts to take on such a challenge. Remarkably, the book delivers such a high degree of informed understanding across the boards that it will stand as a benchmark and reference point for leading and junior scholars, as well as advanced students and informed publics."--Paul Statham, Ethnic and Racial Studies Review "[An] extraordinary and interesting book... [This] book, a rich and nuanced view of immigration in these six countries, should be required reading for understanding how these six nations deal with immigrants and their integration into the larger society."--David M. Reimers, Journal of American Studies "This study really is comparative immigration scholarship at its very best. It exposes best practices and successes, encourages countries to learn from each other, and contends that existing problems can be solved and integration achieved. At a time when both North America and Western Europe's diversity is too often portrayed as an insurmountable challenge, this book gives us hope."--Sarah Hackett, Patterns of Prejudice
ISBN: 9780691176208
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 539g
336 pages