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The essays in this volume tackle the construction and significance
of race and ethnicity as boundary-making processes among diverse
immigrant populations in the United States. Race and ethnicity can
both unite and divide. The individual scholars contributing to this
volume model, deploy, and explain notions of 'borders' and
'boundaries' in various ways, but collectively they emphasize the
fluidity of racial and ethnic identities that are shaped,
negotiated, and contested in specific contexts and situations.
Constructing Borders/Crossing Boundaries also captures the range of
spaces in which ethnicity and race become salient-the university,
the immigrant enclave, the detention center, the work place, the
nightclub, and even the trans-Atlantic passage. This
interdisciplinary work features essays on a diverse range of
immigrant populations from past to present and will interest
scholars from across disciplines.
The essays in this volume tackle the construction and significance
of race and ethnicity as boundary-making processes among diverse
immigrant populations in the United States. Race and ethnicity can
both unite and divide. The individual scholars contributing to this
volume model, deploy, and explain notions of "borders" and
"boundaries" in various ways, but collectively they emphasize the
fluidity of racial and ethnic identities that are shaped,
negotiated, and contested in specific contexts and situations.
Constructing Borders/Crossing Boundaries also captures the range of
spaces in which ethnicity and race become salient-the university,
the immigrant enclave, the detention center, the work place, the
nightclub, and even the trans-Atlantic passage. This
interdisciplinary work features essays on a diverse range of
immigrant populations from past to present and will interest
scholars from across disciplines.
Feliciano examines how immigrants compare to those left behind in
their origin countries, and how that selection affects the
educational adaptation of children of immigrants in the United
States. Her findings contradict the assumption that immigrants are
negatively selected: nearly all immigrants are more educated than
the populations in their home countries, but Asian immigrants are
the most highly selected. This helps explain the Asian second
generations' superior educational attainment as compared to
Europeans, Afro-Caribbeans, or Latin Americans. The book challenges
cultural explanations for ethnic differences by highlighting how
inequalities in the relative pre-migration educational attainments
of immigrants are reproduced among their children in the U.S.
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