The relationship between generation, first and second, ethnic identity, modernity, and acculturation among immigrant Lebanese American women
<p>Based on Berry’s model of acculturation, when immigrants move to a new country, they choose to live according to any one of the following four acculturation modes: assimilation, integration, separation, or marginalization. The specific cultural and psychosocial characteristics of...
Main Author: | Fadlallah, Hanan Elali |
---|---|
Language: | EN |
Published: |
Wayne State University
2016
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10105032 |
Similar Items
-
Ethnic Identity in Second-Generation Arab Americans
by: Elfar, Yassmeen
Published: (2016) -
Ethnic Identity and Empathy| A Study of Second-Generation Armenian-Americans
by: Bedikian, Alique
Published: (2018) -
The effects of gender conformity/nonconformity and ethnic identity on workplace sexual identity management among LGB African Americans
by: Perez, Kimm M.
Published: (2015) -
Pattterns and paths: Ethnic identity development in second generation Indian Americans
by: Joshi, Khyati Yogeshkumar
Published: (2001) -
The Conscientization of Silent Voices| An Interpretive Case Study Exploring the Experiences of Assimilation and Acculturation on American-Raised, First Generation and Second Generation Ethiopian Women Academic Achievement, Self-Identity Development and Perception of Beauty
by: Wynn, Adrienne L.
Published: (2018)