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The characteristics of minorities in the United States have changed
significantly over the past twenty years. Today's better-educated,
more highly skilled immigrants must merge with more acculturated
minority groups to achieve assimilation while still preserving the
rich diversity of their ethnic heritages. This concept is one focus
of Rethinking Today's Minorities, a collection of articles by some
of the nation's foremost experts in the field of intergroup
relations. This volume offers new conceptual overviews by which to
compare and evaluate acculturation. The essays also focus on
rethinking the nature of minorities long present in the United
States, including African, Native, and Asian Americans. Suggestions
for policy changes and programs for social action designed to
address the needs of minority groups are also included. Following
an introductory overview of the changing demographics of today's
minorities, the contributors then discuss major developments in
minority communities such as the disappearance of formerly
distinctive European-American ethnic groups, the continuation of
affirmative action, and the molding of policies to benefit Native
Americans and refugees. The book then includes essays on the growth
of the Puerto Rican community in the U.S. and the emerging Iranian
American middle class. The study concludes with a challenge to the
media for its role in perpetuating ethnic stereotypes. Rethinking
Today's Minorities will be an excellent supplemental text for
graduate or undergraduate courses in race and ethnic relations,
sociology of minorities, American studies, and immigration history.
It will also be an important reference book for school and public
libraries.
For undergraduate and graduate introductory level courses in race
and ethnic relations. Introducing the core theories, concepts, and
issues concerning race and ethnic relations in the United States.
Based on the top-selling title by the same author, Strangers to
These Shores, this book provides a framework for understanding the
interpersonal dynamics and the larger context of changing
intergroup relations. Following a presentation of introductory
concepts in the first chapter-particularly that of the stranger as
a social phenomenon and the concept of the Dillingham Flaw-the
first group of chapters examines differences in culture, reality
perceptions, social class, and power as reasons for intergroup
conflict. These chapters also look at the dominant group's varying
expectations about how minorities should "fit" into its society.
Chapters 2 and 3 include coverage of some middle-range conflict and
interactionist theories. Chapters 4 and 5 explore the dimensions
and interrelationships of prejudice and discrimination, and Chapter
6 covers the dominant-minority response patterns so common across
different groups and time periods. This chapter presents
middle-range conflict theories about economic exploitation too.
Chapter 7 employs holistic sociological concepts in discussing
ethnic consciousness; ethnicity as a social process; current racial
and ethnic issues, fears, and reactions; and the various indicators
of U.S. diversity in the 21st century.
Sociohistorical coverage of racial, ethnic, religious and other
groups This top-selling comprehensive text examines racial and
ethnic relations in the U.S. from a sociohistorical perspective.
The book integrates the three main theoretical perspectives and the
experiences of more than 50 racial, ethnic, religious, and other
groups. The Census Update program incorporates 2010 Census data
into a course-simply and easily. The components of the Census
Update Program include an updated census edition with all charts
and graphs-to reflect the results of the 2010 Census. In addition,
A Short Introduction to the U.S. Census is available and an updated
MySocLab. Teaching & Learning Experience *Personalize Learning
-MySocLab delivers proven results in helping students succeed,
provides engaging experiences that personalize learning, and comes
from a trusted partner with educational expertise and a deep
commitment to helping students and instructors achieve their goals.
*Improve Critical Thinking - The book challenges students to think
about socioeconomic indicators of minority groups and how they
influence culture. *Engage Students - First-hand immigrant accounts
and comparative examples help students experience diverse relations
on a global scale. *Explore Theory - Covers all major theoretical
perspectives. *Support Instructors - MySocLab enables instructors
to assess student progress and adapt course material to meet the
specific needs of the class.
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Ridgewood (Hardcover)
Vincent Parrillo, Beth Parrillo, Arthur Wrubel
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R612
Discovery Miles 6 120
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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This best-selling, comprehensive text on racial and ethnic
relations in the U.S. covers theoretical issues and the experiences
of more than 50 specific groups.
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