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From Segregation to the Mainstream: Childhood Neighborhoods of Immigrants and their Descendants in France and Sweden

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posted on 2024-08-19, 08:30 authored by Rosa WeberRosa Weber, Elena Pupaza, Ben WilsonBen Wilson, Mathieu Ichou

Although there is a considerable body of research on immigrant spatial assimilation, there is a lack of comparative studies that evaluate whether differences across contexts and outcomes are genuine, or merely a product of different research designs. In response, we carry out a comprehensive analysis of childhood neighborhood contexts across multiple generations, comparing four spatial outcomes across two national contexts: France and Sweden. Our approach not only generates new evidence for both settings but also assesses the intergenerational development, multidimensionality, and generalizability of spatial assimilation. Our results provide clear evidence that spatial assimilation is occurring simultaneously across multiple domains in both France and Sweden. However, key differences emerge: in Sweden, neighborhood disadvantage for non-European immigrants and their children is initially pronounced but diminishes significantly in later generations, while in France, these disadvantages, although initially smaller, persist among the grandchildren of non-European immigrants.Although there is a considerable body of research on immigrant spatial assimilation, there is a lack of comparative studies that evaluate whether differences across contexts and outcomes are genuine, or merely a product of different research designs. In response, we carry out a comprehensive analysis of childhood neighborhood contexts across multiple generations, comparing four spatial outcomes across two national contexts: France and Sweden. Our approach not only generates new evidence for both settings but also assesses the intergenerational development, multidimensionality, and generalizability of spatial assimilation. Our results provide clear evidence that spatial assimilation is occurring simultaneously across multiple domains in both France and Sweden. However, key differences emerge: in Sweden, neighborhood disadvantage for non-European immigrants and their children is initially pronounced but diminishes significantly in later generations, while in France, these disadvantages, although initially smaller, persist among the grandchildren of non-European immigrants.

Funding

Social Ties and Immigrant Integration: Bridging and Bonding Ties in France and Sweden

Swedish Research Council for Health Working Life and Welfare

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Segregation across multiple domains: How does workplace and neighbourhood segregation shape the employment trajectories of refugees and their children?

Swedish Research Council for Health Working Life and Welfare

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Diversity preferences, diversity-motivated behaviors and their consequences: a study of foreign-born residents in Sweden at the intersection between country of birth and reason for migration

Swedish Research Council for Health Working Life and Welfare

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The Neighborhood Revisited: Spatial polarization and social cohesion in contemporary Sweden

Bank of Sweden Tercentenary Foundation

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A Better Life for the Children of Exile: Intergenerational Adaptation of the Descendants of Refugees

European Research Council

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Agence Nationale de la Recherche (Grant number ANR-20-CE41-0001)

History

ISSN

2002-617X

Original title

From Segregation to the Mainstream: Childhood Neighborhoods of Immigrants and their Descendants in France and Sweden

Original language

  • English

Publication date

2024-08-19

access_level

  • public

access_condition

  • PUBLIC