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Perceived discrimination among Latino immigrants in new destinations: The case of Durham, NC.

Authors
  • Flippen, Chenoa A1
  • Parrado, Emilio A1
  • 1 University of Pennsylvania.
Type
Published Article
Journal
Sociological perspectives : SP : official publication of the Pacific Sociological Association
Publication Date
Dec 01, 2015
Volume
58
Issue
4
Pages
666–685
Identifiers
PMID: 26848208
Source
Medline
Keywords
Language
English
License
Unknown

Abstract

This paper draws on original survey data to assess the prevalence of perceived discrimination among Latin American immigrants to Durham, NC, a "new immigrant destinations" in the Southeastern United States. Even though discrimination has a wide-ranging impact on social groups, from blocked opportunities, to adverse health outcomes, to highlighting and reifying inter-group boundaries, research among immigrant Latinos is rare, especially in new destinations. Our theoretical framework and empirical analysis expand social constructivist approaches that view ethnic discrimination as emerging from processes of competition and incorporation. We broaden prior discussions by investigating the specific social forces that give rise to perceived discrimination. In particular, we examine the extent to which perceptions of unequal treatment vary by gender, elaborating on the situational conditions than differentiate discrimination experiences for men and women. We also incorporate dimensions unique to the contemporary Latino immigrant experience, such as legal status, family migration dynamics, and transnationalism.

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