1st Edition

The European Second Generation Compared Does the Integration Context Matter?

408 Pages
by Routledge

Integration of newcomers is a foremost challenge for contemporary Europe. The ‘second generation’ – children born of immigrant parentage – is crucial in this process, for they constitute a growing and increasingly vocal segment of the metropolitan youth. This book offers an unprecedented look at the real-life place and position of the European second generation in education, labour, social... Read more
Acknowledgements, 1 Introduction, 2 Comparative integration context theory Participation and belonging in diverse European cities, 3 Research methodology, 4 The TIES respondents and their parents Background socio-demographic characteristics, 5 School careers of second-generation youth in Europe Which education systems provide the best chances for success? 6 Assessing the labour market position and its determinants for the second generation, 7 Union formation and partner choice, 8 Identities Urban belonging and intercultural relations, 9 Ways of ‘being Muslim’ Religious identities of second-generation Turks, 10 Conclusions and implications The integration context matters, List of contributors.

Biography

Maurice Crul is is the founder and general coordinator of the international project 'The Integration of the European Second Generation' (TIES). Jens Schneider is senior researcher at the Institute for Migration Research and Intercultural Studies at the University of Osnabrück. Frans Lelie is TIES project manager.

Scholars of immigration have been waiting for years for a rigorous, internationally comparative study that would provide the basis for systematic thinking about the impacts of local and national contexts on integration processes, and with The European Second Generation Compared, we finally have it. The field will never be the same. This book is essential reading for anyone who claims to be well informed about how the children of immigrants are faring. – Richard Alba, Co-Author of Remaking the American Mainstream

This book is both theoretically and empirically important, as no other work has been able to compare these second-generation groups along key indices of integration in so many European countries. It will complement the debates concerning the second generation, which have been dominated by American analysts studying immigration to the US. - Miri Song, Professor of Sociology, School of Social Policy, Sociology, & Social Research, University of Kent

The results of the massive TIES project have been much anticipated. Presented here through an integrated set of chapters, they certainly do not disappoint. The project, its thoughtful design, robust methods and compelling findings set a new standard in migration studies. Further, TIES provides highly significant, new insights into second generation social dynamics and comparative outcomes. - Steven Vertovec, Director, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity