Religious Identity and Acculturation of Immigrant Minority Youth: Toward a Contextual and Developmental Approach
This review proposes an integrative contextual and developmental approach to religious identity development and acculturative adaptation among adolescents with an immigrant background. Relevant research with minority adolescents has addressed three main research questions: (1) What is distinctive ab...
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Veröffentlicht in: | European psychologist 2018, Vol.23 (1), p.32-43 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | This review proposes an integrative contextual and
developmental approach to religious identity development and acculturative
adaptation among adolescents with an immigrant background. Relevant research
with minority adolescents has addressed three main research questions: (1) What
is distinctive about religious identity development in (Muslim) minority youth?
(2) How does religious identity relate to their acculturative adaptation? and
(3) What is the role of interpersonal and intercultural relations in specific
acculturation contexts? In line with multiple developmental pathways in specific
acculturation contexts, Muslim youth in Europe showed either stability or an
increase in religious identification throughout adolescence, yet religious
identity development varied greatly across religious communities and receiving
societies. In support of the adaptive function of identity development in
acculturating youth, (2) the religious identity of Muslim adolescents
contributed positively to their psychological adaptation through the commitment
to heritage culture values and identities; and it was either unrelated or
conflicting with mainstream culture adoption and sociocultural adaptation,
depending on specific acculturation contexts. Finally, religious identities
reflect the bicultural social world of minority adolescents: strong and stable
religious identities were premised on religious transmission in interpersonal
relations with immigrant parents and minority peers. Moreover, religious
identity conflict or compatibility with mainstream cultural values and
identities was contingent on intercultural relations: perceived discrimination
and Islamophobia fuel identity conflict in Muslim youth, whereas more harmonious
intercultural relations enable compatible and adaptive pathways of religious
identity. |
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ISSN: | 1016-9040 1878-531X |
DOI: | 10.1027/1016-9040/a000309 |