Migration Stigma

Understanding Prejudice, Discrimination, and Exclusion

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Paperback
$70.00 US
| $92.00 CAN
On sale Mar 26, 2024 | 266 Pages | 978-0-262-54812-0
An introduction to the concept of “migration stigma,” along with new analytical frameworks to deepen understanding of the experiences of immigrants, their descendants, and native-born residents in immigrant-receiving societies.

Due to economic crises, sociopolitical instability, and climate change, international migration is likely to persist if not increase in the future. Meanwhile, struggles to secure widespread acceptance of immigrant populations are evident worldwide. This volume, edited by Lawrence Yang, Maureen Eger, and Bruce Link, introduces the concept of “migration stigma” and proposes new ways to understand the complex challenges facing immigrants, their descendants, and contemporary societies.  Contributions reveal how migration stigma affects areas such as health, financial well-being, and social cohesion; analyze the multilevel and temporal processes underlying migration stigma; and propose social, economic, and policy frameworks to address its harmful consequences.

Contributors
Muna Adem, Drew Blasco, Andrea Bohman, Heide Castañeda, Christian S. Czymara, Joerg Dollmann, Maureen A. Eger, Tyrone A. Forman, Daniel Gabrielsson, San Juanita García, Anastasia Gorodzeisky, Mark L. Hatzenbuehler, Marc Helbling, Mikael Hjerm, Seth M. Holmes, Elisabeth Ivarsflaten, Tomás R. Jiménez, Irena Kogan, Christian Albrekt Larsen, Bruce G. Link, Rahsaan Maxwell, Supriya Misra, Dina Okamoto, John E. Pachankis, Nicolas Rüsch, Georg Schomerus, Patrick Simon, Anders Vassenden, Paolo Velásquez, Katie Wang, Markus Weißmann, Rima Wilkes, Lawrence H. Yang, Min Zhou
CONTENTS
List of Contributors vii
Preface, Julia R. Lupp ix
1 Migration Stigma: An Introduction
2 How Are Stigma Processes Related to Different Aspects of Migration-Generated Diversity? 15
3 Revisiting Group Threat Theory Using Insights from Stigma Research 45
4 The Conceptualizations, Causes, and Consequences of Stigma: Background for a Model of Migration-Generated Stigma 59
5 Migration, Stigma, and Lived Experiences: A Conceptual Framework for Centering Lived Experiences 75
6 Defying Discrimination? Germany’s Ethnic Minorities within Education and Training Systems 99
7 The Lived Experience of Stigma among Immigrant Youth 121
8 How Policies That Impact Migrants Amplify or Mitigate Stigma Processes 139
9 Structural Stigma and Health: How U.S. Policies Mitigate and Amplify Stigma 165
10 Processes and Pathways of Stigmatization and Destigmatization over Time 179
11 Immigrants and Processes of Destigmatization Dina Okamoto and Muna Adem 201
Bibliography 213
Subject Index 247
Strüngmann Forum Report Series 251

About

An introduction to the concept of “migration stigma,” along with new analytical frameworks to deepen understanding of the experiences of immigrants, their descendants, and native-born residents in immigrant-receiving societies.

Due to economic crises, sociopolitical instability, and climate change, international migration is likely to persist if not increase in the future. Meanwhile, struggles to secure widespread acceptance of immigrant populations are evident worldwide. This volume, edited by Lawrence Yang, Maureen Eger, and Bruce Link, introduces the concept of “migration stigma” and proposes new ways to understand the complex challenges facing immigrants, their descendants, and contemporary societies.  Contributions reveal how migration stigma affects areas such as health, financial well-being, and social cohesion; analyze the multilevel and temporal processes underlying migration stigma; and propose social, economic, and policy frameworks to address its harmful consequences.

Contributors
Muna Adem, Drew Blasco, Andrea Bohman, Heide Castañeda, Christian S. Czymara, Joerg Dollmann, Maureen A. Eger, Tyrone A. Forman, Daniel Gabrielsson, San Juanita García, Anastasia Gorodzeisky, Mark L. Hatzenbuehler, Marc Helbling, Mikael Hjerm, Seth M. Holmes, Elisabeth Ivarsflaten, Tomás R. Jiménez, Irena Kogan, Christian Albrekt Larsen, Bruce G. Link, Rahsaan Maxwell, Supriya Misra, Dina Okamoto, John E. Pachankis, Nicolas Rüsch, Georg Schomerus, Patrick Simon, Anders Vassenden, Paolo Velásquez, Katie Wang, Markus Weißmann, Rima Wilkes, Lawrence H. Yang, Min Zhou

Table of Contents

CONTENTS
List of Contributors vii
Preface, Julia R. Lupp ix
1 Migration Stigma: An Introduction
2 How Are Stigma Processes Related to Different Aspects of Migration-Generated Diversity? 15
3 Revisiting Group Threat Theory Using Insights from Stigma Research 45
4 The Conceptualizations, Causes, and Consequences of Stigma: Background for a Model of Migration-Generated Stigma 59
5 Migration, Stigma, and Lived Experiences: A Conceptual Framework for Centering Lived Experiences 75
6 Defying Discrimination? Germany’s Ethnic Minorities within Education and Training Systems 99
7 The Lived Experience of Stigma among Immigrant Youth 121
8 How Policies That Impact Migrants Amplify or Mitigate Stigma Processes 139
9 Structural Stigma and Health: How U.S. Policies Mitigate and Amplify Stigma 165
10 Processes and Pathways of Stigmatization and Destigmatization over Time 179
11 Immigrants and Processes of Destigmatization Dina Okamoto and Muna Adem 201
Bibliography 213
Subject Index 247
Strüngmann Forum Report Series 251