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Edited by Steven J. Gold and Ruben G. Rumbaut
   

   
Beyond the Immigrant Enclave: Network Change and Assimilation
   

Susan Wierzbicki

       
   

Wierzbicki's work shows that even when immigrants settle outside ethnic enclaves, their social networks remain in the ethnic community.

Immigrant communities--even poor ones--are often portrayed as solidary and supportive. Wierzbicki examines the presence and homogeneity of ties among the foreign- and native-born of different ethnic groups. She finds that the foreign-born consistently report fewer ties than the native-born, in part because of less education or shorter duration of residence.

The foreign-born also have more ethnically homogeneous ties, even when they live outside enclaves and in wealthier areas. This finding has implications for theories of assimilation or incorporation. For lack of network data, previous examination of assimilation has often relied on patterns of residential settlement rather than actual social ties. This study indicates that the foreign-born may assimilate spatially but not socially.

Table of Contents

    Introduction
  1. Theory and Literature
  2. Data and Variables
  3. Number of Ties
  4. Kin and Neighbor Ties
  5. Homophily
  6. Conclusion

  7. Appendix
    References
    Index
       
  Susan Wierzbicki is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Irvine. 0 0She earned her Ph.D. in 2001 from the University of Washington.
       
    x, 166 pages. Index, bibliography. ISBN 1-59332-004-3.
$58. Published.