Navigating to the Top in an Egalitarian Welfare State: Institutional Opportunity Structures of Second-generation Social Mobility

A large body of work has demonstrated the substantial intergenerational mobility experienced by children of immigrants, yet the institutional determinants of incorporation are poorly understood. Building on insights from neo-classical assimilation theory, this article analyzes in-depth interviews wi...

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Veröffentlicht in:The International migration review 2022-03, Vol.56 (1), p.97-122
Hauptverfasser: Midtbøen, Arnfinn H., Nadim, Marjan
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Nadim, Marjan
description A large body of work has demonstrated the substantial intergenerational mobility experienced by children of immigrants, yet the institutional determinants of incorporation are poorly understood. Building on insights from neo-classical assimilation theory, this article analyzes in-depth interviews with 62 high-achieving children of labor immigrants from Pakistan, Turkey, India, and Morocco and investigates how they maneuvered through Norway’s educational system and reached their current positions as medical doctors, lawyers, and business professionals. We show that these children of immigrants from low-income households capitalized on a series of institutional opportunity structures provided by Norway’s egalitarian welfare state, such as a school system with high standardization and low stratification, free higher education, and a cultural and institutional context that supports women’s employment. In line with neo-classical assimilation theory, we argue that the specific institutional structures and cultural beliefs in the Norwegian context shape the strategies and forms of adaptation chosen by ethnic minority groups. However, our analyses suggest the need for careful consideration of how such strategies and adaptations vary across national contexts.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); SAGE Complete A-Z List; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Acculturation
Adaptation
Adjustment
Assimilation
Child poverty
Children
Context
Cultural values
Education
Educational systems
Egalitarianism
Employment
Ethnic groups
Higher education
Households
Immigrants
Institution building
Intergenerational mobility
Low income groups
Medicine
Minority & ethnic groups
Minority groups
Mobility
Opportunity structures
Physicians
Second generation
Social mobility
Standardization
Welfare state
Women
title Navigating to the Top in an Egalitarian Welfare State: Institutional Opportunity Structures of Second-generation Social Mobility
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