Religion and Culture of Origin. Re-Shaping Identity in the Integration Process: A Case Study in Sicily

What happens when people of different cultures, values, religion live together? Sociological studies on immigrative phenomenon often swing between immigration and integration policies. These policies actually reveal the difficulty of the host society to institutionalize new models of social differen...

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Main Author: Lorenzo Ferrante
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Lodz University Press 2019-07-01
Series:Qualitative Sociology Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/qualit/article/view/5358
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spelling doaj-6a2c133598f24d7fabee0100ea38d1302020-11-25T02:46:37ZengLodz University PressQualitative Sociology Review1733-80772019-07-0115312614710.18778/1733-8077.15.3.075358Religion and Culture of Origin. Re-Shaping Identity in the Integration Process: A Case Study in SicilyLorenzo Ferrante0University of Palermo, ItalyWhat happens when people of different cultures, values, religion live together? Sociological studies on immigrative phenomenon often swing between immigration and integration policies. These policies actually reveal the difficulty of the host society to institutionalize new models of social differences accompanying multiculturalism. Immigrants who “arrive” continue their life in a place where they do not passively participate in the passing of time, but become actors. Pressed by the hegemonic culture of the host society to adapt, do not cease to practice their religious and origin cultural expressions, often in conditions of urban spatial and social marginalization, they resist assimilation with ethnic persistence strategies. Considering the impact of religion and origin cultural values on expression of differences, it is important to consider their role in the integration process. And, above all—facilitate or hinder integration? These dynamics have been analyzed in a research study on immigrants’ integration process in Palermo. The main results are presented in this paper. In this case study, the research’s data hypothesizes a theoretical model of integration in which immigrants, free to express their religious and cultural differences, tend to reduce their perception of minorityhttps://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/qualit/article/view/5358IntegrationReligionIdentityMulticulturalismAdaptationAssimilation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lorenzo Ferrante
spellingShingle Lorenzo Ferrante
Religion and Culture of Origin. Re-Shaping Identity in the Integration Process: A Case Study in Sicily
Qualitative Sociology Review
Integration
Religion
Identity
Multiculturalism
Adaptation
Assimilation
author_facet Lorenzo Ferrante
author_sort Lorenzo Ferrante
title Religion and Culture of Origin. Re-Shaping Identity in the Integration Process: A Case Study in Sicily
title_short Religion and Culture of Origin. Re-Shaping Identity in the Integration Process: A Case Study in Sicily
title_full Religion and Culture of Origin. Re-Shaping Identity in the Integration Process: A Case Study in Sicily
title_fullStr Religion and Culture of Origin. Re-Shaping Identity in the Integration Process: A Case Study in Sicily
title_full_unstemmed Religion and Culture of Origin. Re-Shaping Identity in the Integration Process: A Case Study in Sicily
title_sort religion and culture of origin. re-shaping identity in the integration process: a case study in sicily
publisher Lodz University Press
series Qualitative Sociology Review
issn 1733-8077
publishDate 2019-07-01
description What happens when people of different cultures, values, religion live together? Sociological studies on immigrative phenomenon often swing between immigration and integration policies. These policies actually reveal the difficulty of the host society to institutionalize new models of social differences accompanying multiculturalism. Immigrants who “arrive” continue their life in a place where they do not passively participate in the passing of time, but become actors. Pressed by the hegemonic culture of the host society to adapt, do not cease to practice their religious and origin cultural expressions, often in conditions of urban spatial and social marginalization, they resist assimilation with ethnic persistence strategies. Considering the impact of religion and origin cultural values on expression of differences, it is important to consider their role in the integration process. And, above all—facilitate or hinder integration? These dynamics have been analyzed in a research study on immigrants’ integration process in Palermo. The main results are presented in this paper. In this case study, the research’s data hypothesizes a theoretical model of integration in which immigrants, free to express their religious and cultural differences, tend to reduce their perception of minority
topic Integration
Religion
Identity
Multiculturalism
Adaptation
Assimilation
url https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/qualit/article/view/5358
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