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Effects of 9/11 on Identity, Trust, and Stress Among Arab Americans and Other Americans in the Detroit Region

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Abstract:

With new data from the Detroit Area Study (DAS) and Detroit Arab American Study (DAAS), we consider the long-term effects of 9/11 and its aftermath on identity, trust, confidence in institutions, stress, and perceived safety and security among residents of the Detroit three-county region. The DAS is a representative sample (n=508) sample of the general population; the DAAS is a representative oversample (n=1005) of the diverse community of Arab Americans living in the same region. We analyze four sets of factors: (1) experiences since September 11th, such as harassment, support, perceptions of safety and security, reactions to the "war on terrorism," and reactions to the ongoing conflict in the Middle East; (2) respondent characteristics, including socioeconomic variables, ethnicity, national origin, generation, cohort of immigration, religious affiliation and practices, language use, and residential characteristics; (3) the increasing prevalence of transnational ties, such as exposure to international sources of news, entertainment, and information, international social and business networks, and post-September 11th restrictions; and (4) the connection to sources of local social capital, such as employment and business ownership, social networks, organizational memberships, and political participation.

Most Common Document Word Stems:

american (53), arab (47), social (26), communiti (25), detroit (23), univers (20), immigr (16), nation (15), institut (15), michigan (13), research (13), ethnic (13), septemb (12), organ (9), religi (9), trust (9), studi (9), 11th (9), daa (8), impact (8), ident (8),

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Arab Americans, September 11th, identity, trust, stress, social capital
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Name: American Sociological Association
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MLA Citation:

Baker, Wayne. "Effects of 9/11 on Identity, Trust, and Stress Among Arab Americans and Other Americans in the Detroit Region" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, Hilton San Francisco & Renaissance Parc 55 Hotel, San Francisco, CA,, Aug 14, 2004 <Not Available>. 2009-05-26 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p109263_index.html>

APA Citation:

Baker, W. E. , 2004-08-14 "Effects of 9/11 on Identity, Trust, and Stress Among Arab Americans and Other Americans in the Detroit Region" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, Hilton San Francisco & Renaissance Parc 55 Hotel, San Francisco, CA, Online <.PDF>. 2009-05-26 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p109263_index.html

Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript
Review Method: Peer Reviewed
Abstract: With new data from the Detroit Area Study (DAS) and Detroit Arab American Study (DAAS), we consider the long-term effects of 9/11 and its aftermath on identity, trust, confidence in institutions, stress, and perceived safety and security among residents of the Detroit three-county region. The DAS is a representative sample (n=508) sample of the general population; the DAAS is a representative oversample (n=1005) of the diverse community of Arab Americans living in the same region. We analyze four sets of factors: (1) experiences since September 11th, such as harassment, support, perceptions of safety and security, reactions to the "war on terrorism," and reactions to the ongoing conflict in the Middle East; (2) respondent characteristics, including socioeconomic variables, ethnicity, national origin, generation, cohort of immigration, religious affiliation and practices, language use, and residential characteristics; (3) the increasing prevalence of transnational ties, such as exposure to international sources of news, entertainment, and information, international social and business networks, and post-September 11th restrictions; and (4) the connection to sources of local social capital, such as employment and business ownership, social networks, organizational memberships, and political participation.

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Document Type: .PDF
Page count: 13
Word count: 2405
Text sample:
Effects of 9/11 on Identity Trust and Stress Among Arab Americans and Other Americans in the Detroit Region1 Wayne E. Baker Professor of Management and Organization Professor of Sociology Faculty Associate at the Institute for Social Research University of Michigan 701 Tappan Street Ann Arbor MI 48109-1234 (734) 764-2306 wayneb@umich.edu Times of war and national crisis reshape society organizations and culture. Such times challenge identities institutions and relationships in communities and the nation. The terrorist attacks on September 11
and security Ethnicity & national Stress origin Religion & religious practices Residence Local Sources of Cohort of immigration Social Capital Language use Employment & business Other socio- ownership demographics Social networks (age gender education Organizational affiliations etc.) Community political & religious participation 13


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