During the 1950s and 1960s increasing numbers of American
citizens were stationed in foreign countries, and a whole
generation of American children grew up abroad. As the
interdependence of nations increases, new generations of Absentee
Americans will be raised outside the United States. Based on
interviews and questionnaire responses, this unique volume
describes the impact of overseas living on Americans who spent at
least some of their formative years in countries other than the
United States.
It touches on a wide range of subjects such as schooling, living
arrangements, social life abroad, and the experience of reentry
into the United States, and it also provides a comprehensive view
of the distinctive opinions shared by these global nomads. By
exploring the lives and experiences of repatriates, the author
emphasizes the need for increased intercultural contact and for
educational programs that prepare young Americans to better
understand the United States as part of the world community. This
work will be of interest to sociologists and psychologists, as well
as to Absentee Americans themselves, and to managers of public and
private institutions with an international or intercultural
dimension.
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