Urban Contexts and Immigrant Organizations: Differences in New York, El Paso, Paris, and Barcelona | Artigo
Abstract: “This article compares immigrant and ethnic organizations in four major immigrant-receiving cities and reveals substantial variation across these immigrant gateway cities. Using data from ethnographic fieldwork and an original database of relevant organizations in New York City; El Paso, Texas; Paris; and Barcelona, I find differences in organizational type and density, as well as in their legitimacy and funding. This article contributes to a growing literature on immigrant organizations. Although immigrant organizations have a long history in some cities, they may not always operate in ways that enhance refugee and migrant integration. Comparing immigrant organizations is fruitful because it tells us more about city and national political systems and why distinct localities deal with cultural minorities differently. These comparisons can help the readers to understand the barriers and ladders that immigrants encounter in different cities and inform policy-makers in designing better approaches to incorporate immigrants.”
The article was published in 2020 and complements research by the author Ernesto Castañeda, such as the book “A Place to Call Home: Immigrant Exclusion and Urban Belonging in New York, Paris, and Barcelona”.
Photo: Jorge Láscar (CC BY 2.0)
ANO
2020
AUTORES
Ernesto Castañeda
EDITORES
Katharine M. Donato, Elizabeth Ferris, SAGE Journals