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ID083841
Title ProperPlaces of socialization and (sub)ethnic identities among Asian immigrants in the US
Other Title Informationevidence from the 2007 Chinese American Homeland Politics Survey
LanguageENG
AuthorLien, Pei-te
Publication2008.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This research provides an empirical assessment of the relationship between places of socialization and ethnic self-identity preferences among Asian immigrants in the US from separate parts of a politically divided homeland. Does place of socialization influence the (sub)ethnic self-identity of Chinese Americans raised in China, Taiwan and Hong Kong? How do socialization context and transnational political concerns, among other factors, help structure the relationship? Benefiting from recent advancements in targeted ethnic sampling and telephone survey methodology, this paper examines results of the 2007 Chinese American Homeland Politics Survey to study the contour and sources of ethnic identity preferences among Chinese in the US from separate homeland origins. The usefulness of a theoretical framework that contrasts primordial ties with transnational political ties in understanding the structuring of identity preferences at the subethnic level is tested.
`In' analytical NoteAsian Ethinicity Vol. 9, No.3; Oct 2008: p151-170
Journal SourceAsian Ethinicity Vol. 9, No.3; Oct 2008: p151-170
Key WordsEthnic Identity ;  Subethnicity ;  Chinese Americans ;  Taiwanese Americans ;  Transnationalism ;  Homeland Politics