African Immigrants in the United States
The Gendering Significance of Race through International Migration?
Abstract
African Immigrants in the United States: The Gendering Significance of Race? examines recent trends and implications of the growth of African immigration to the United States. Mamadi Corra highlights several resulting sociodemographic processes underway, including the changing composition of the foreign-born and US Black populations. Corra also explores sociodemographic profiles of these “new African Americans” or “new Americans,” highlighting the increasing diversity, yet also the racialized portrait of this group. Corra discusses key patterns including the shifting racial and gender composition of immigrants, with a growing proportion of “Black” and female African immigrants and a decreasing proportion of “White” and male immigrants. The book also compares socioeconomic profiles of African immigrants with other immigrant groups and Native American subgroups. Taken together, Corra discovers that the salience of race that is mediated by gender.
Schlagworte
Black immigrants discrimination emigration and immigration race relations racial and ethnic diversity racial and ethnic inequality international migration- Kapitel Ausklappen | EinklappenSeiten
- i–xxx Preface i–xxx
- 159–162 Methodological Appendix 159–162
- 163–176 References 163–176
- 177–184 Index 177–184
- 185–186 About the Author 185–186