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Immigration and Ethnic Conflict reviews the experience of
post-industrial countries that have experienced large-scale
movements of population since the Second World War, creating
ethnically diverse multicultural societies in a context of rapid
economic, technological and social change. The book uses a critical
theoretical approach which emphasises the dynamic nature of the
structural changes which have taken place and the interdependence
of economic, political, social and psychological factors. The
results of extensive comparative studies of Britain, Canada and
Australia are reviewed, with special attention to questions of
immigrant adaptation, refugees, racism, unemployment, ethnic
nationalism and social conflict. Traditional views of immigrant
assimilation are rejected in favour of one which treats immigrants
and ethnic minorities as the catalysts of change in a global
polity, economy and society, simultaneously united and divided by
satellite communications, nuclear terror and the world population
explosion.
First published in 1954, Colour Prejudice in Britain is an account
of the assimilation and adjustment of 345 West Indian workers who
came to England between 1941 and 1943, many of whom have stayed to
the present day. The study endeavours to trace the relationships
between this group of West Indians and the English people with whom
they came in contact over a period of approximately ten years. It
is therefore a study in the two related fields of immigration and
racial relations. This book will be of interest to students of
sociology, history, and ethnic studies.
Immigration and Ethnic Conflict reviews the experience of
post-industrial countries that have experienced large-scale
movements of population since the Second World War, creating
ethnically diverse multicultural societies in a context of rapid
economic, technological and social change. The book uses a critical
theoretical approach which emphasises the dynamic nature of the
structural changes which have taken place and the interdependence
of economic, political, social and psychological factors. The
results of extensive comparative studies of Britain, Canada and
Australia are reviewed, with special attention to questions of
immigrant adaptation, refugees, racism, unemployment, ethnic
nationalism and social conflict. Traditional views of immigrant
assimilation are rejected in favour of one which treats immigrants
and ethnic minorities as the catalysts of change in a global
polity, economy and society, simultaneously united and divided by
satellite communications, nuclear terror and the world population
explosion.
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