964 resultados para immigration quotas
Resumo:
Emigrating and having to leave children behind may be a risk factor for the mental health of immigrants. This study aimed to compare the psychological symptoms reported by immigrants mothers and fathers who took their children with them with those who left their children behind. The sample comprised 213 Latin American immigrants (123 women and 90 men). The results showed that mothers who did not have children with them reported more psychological symptoms than those who did. Few differences were observed in the case of fathers, except that those who had their children with them reported more symptoms related with somatization. After controlling for possible confounding variables ('time since immigration', ·having a job', 'legal status', and social support') it is concluded that for mothers not being accompanied by own's children explains the largest proportion of the psychological synptoms analyzed, although the time since immigration also accounts for some of the variance in the case of depressive sympthomatology and general distress. It is likely that the despair and frustation felt by mothers grows as time goes on and they remain unable to reunite the family. These results may be useful in terms of designing prevention and intervention programs with immigrants mothers.
Resumo:
Integrating evolutionary and social representations theories, the current study examines the relationship between perceived disease threat and exclusionary immigration attitudes in the context of a potential avian influenza pandemic. This large-scale disease provides a realistic context for investigating the link between disease threat and immigration attitudes. The main aim of this cross-sectional study (N=412) was to explore mechanisms through which perceived chronic and contextual disease threats operate on immigration attitudes. Structural equation models show that the relationship between chronic disease threat (germ aversion) and exclusionary immigration attitudes (assimiliationist immigration criteria, health-based immigration criteria and desire to reduce the proportion of foreigners) was mediated by ideological and normative beliefs (social dominance orientation, belief in a dangerous world), but not by contextual disease threat (appraisal of avian influenza pandemic threat). Contextual disease threat only predicted support for health-based immigration criteria. The conditions under which real-life disease threats influence intergroup attitudes are scrutinized. Convergence and dissimilarity of evolutionary and social representational approaches in accounting for the link between disease threat and immigration attitudes are discussed.
Resumo:
We study the two key social issues of immigration and housing in lightof each other and analyse which housing policies work best to distributediversity (racial, economic, cultural) equally across our cities and towns. Inparticular, we compare the impact of direct government expenditure andtax incentives on the housing conditions of immigrants in four Europeancountries: France, Germany, Spain and the United Kingdom. The analysisshows that the different policies which have been adopted in these countrieshave not succeeded in preventing immigrants from being concentratedin certain neighbourhoods. The reason is that housing benefits andtax incentives are normally “spatially blind”. In our opinion, governmentsshould consider immigration indirectly in their housing policies and, forinstance, distribute social housing more evenly across different areas topromote sustainable levels of diversity.
Resumo:
We examined the moderating role of national identification in understanding when a focus on intergroup similarity versus difference on ingroup stereotypical traits-manipulated with scale anchors-leads to support for discriminatory immigration policies. In line with intergroup distinctiveness research, national identification moderated the similarity-difference manipulation effect. Low national identifiers supported discriminatory immigration policies more when intergroup difference rather than similarity was made salient, whereas the opposite pattern was found for high national identifiers: They trended toward being more discriminatory when similarity was made salient. The impact of assimilation expectations and national identity content on the findings is discussed.
Resumo:
Using Swiss data from the 2003 International Social Survey Programme (N = 902), this multilevel study combined individual and municipality levels of analysis in the explanation of nationalism, patriotism and exclusionary immigration attitudes. On the individual level, the results show that in line with previous research nationalism (uncritical and blind attachment to the nation) increased exclusionary immigration attitudes, while patriotism (pride in national democratic institutions) was related to greater tolerance towards immigration. On the municipality level, urbanization, socioeconomic status and immigrant proportion (and their interaction effects) were found to affect nationalism, patriotism and immigration attitudes. Nationalist and patriotic forms of national attachment were stronger in German-speaking municipalities than in the French-speaking municipalities. Path analyses further revealed that living in a Swiss-German municipality indirectly led to more negative immigration attitudes through an increase in nationalism. The research is discussed in light of social psychological and political science literature on political attitudes.
Resumo:
A l'instar de ses voisins européens, la Suisse abrite une population de confession musulmane d'une importance démographique croissante. Souvent présentée comme une communauté monolithique, communautariste et rigoriste, cette thèse de doctorat s'est proposée d'apporter une contribution à une appréhension plus nuancée et contrastée de l'identité musulmane. Partant du postulat constructiviste que l'identité n'est pas un état, mais un processus dynamique et complexe s'échelonnant sur les différentes étapes de la vie d'un individu, cette enquête a insisté sur les différentes stratégies identitaires que peuvent mettre en place les individus selon les contextes dans lesquels il vivent et les situations qu'ils rencontrent. Sur la base d'une analyse d'entretiens effectués auprès d'un échantillon de 15 musulmans en Suisse romande, cette recherche a par exemple montré que l'identité musulmane en Suisse était la combinaison subjective et dynamique de quatre types d'identification, à savoir une identification religieuse, une identification psychologique, une identification sociétale et une identification culturelle. L'identification religieuse témoigne des rapports différenciés à Dieu, à l'altérité religieuse, à la société et à soi que peuvent entretenir les musulmans interrogés. En ceci, elle s'exprime tour à tour ou simultanément par une religiosité institutionnelle, sociale, intellectualisée ou spirituelle. Il est aussi à relever que l'identification religieuse semble avoir un poids considérable dans l'identité des musulmans interrogés, ceci quel que soit leur degré de pratique religieuse ou l'intensité de leurs convictions. L'identification psychologique participe à la construction du soi personnel par le triple processus de similarisation, de différenciation et de singularisation. En ceci, le développement de la personnalité individuelle y joue un rôle d'avant-poste. L'identification sociétale consiste essentiellement en la construction du soi comme acteur social. Elle désigne la capacité et la volonté de l'individu de se considérer non seulement comme membre, mais véritablement comme sujet actif de la société dans laquelle il vit. En ceci, l'identification sociétale s'est intéressée aux tendances et aux valeurs de la société helvétique qu'ont intégrées dans leur identité les musulmans de l'enquête. L'identification culturelle a principalement illustré le rôle des origines nationales ou culturelles et des allégeances familiales dans la construction de son identité individuelle de musulman. C'est principalement par la métaphore du « chapiteau islamique » et la relation existant entre l'appartenance confessionnelle et l'appartenance nationale qu'a été développée cette quatrième forme d'identification. Finalement relevons que le religieux islamique en Suisse ne constitue pas un cas particulier mais qu'il s'inscrit dans la dynamique général du champ religieux helvétique et du religieux en modernité tardive.
Resumo:
This last decade, main Spanish urban areas have received large amounts of international immigrants, modifying (sub)urban dynamics. The paper specifically explores the Metropolitan Region of Barcelona (RMB), where, between 1998 and 2009, foreign nationality residents rose from 1.8 to 14.9% of total population.Research focuses on the impact of foreign immigration on three specific dynamics: population growth and distribution/segregation of both Spanish and foreign populations within the metropolitan area; their respective residential mobility patterns; and consequences on their age and sex structure. Results show that there are remarkable differences between the two populations: foreign immigrants have preferably settled in the core city"s least affluent neighbourhoods and, in a second phase, in inner ring municipalities, while the Spanish population continues to move to suburban municipalities