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Places of Socialization and (Sub)ethnic Identities among Asian Immigrants in the United States: Evidence from the Chinese American Homeland Politics Survey, 2007

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Abstract:

Abstract: This research provides an empirical assessment of the relationship between places of socialization and ethnic self-identity preferences among Asian immigrants in the United States from separate parts of a politically divided homeland. Does place of socialization influence the (sub)ethnic self-identity of Chinese Americans growing up in China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong? How do socialization context and transnational political concerns, among other factors, help structure the relationship? Benefitting from recent advancements in targeted ethnic sampling and telephone survey methodology, this essay examines results of the 2007 Chinese American Homeland Politics survey to study the contour and sources of ethnic identity preferences among Chinese in the United States from separate homeland origins. We test 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.

Most Common Document Word Stems:

chines (194), american (141), taiwan (130), china (115), ident (99), ethnic (97), polit (92), taiwanes (89), rais (82), homeland (81), social (75), hong (72), among (67), kong (67), us (57), respond (57), survey (54), transnat (50), place (47), asian (44), state (40),

Author's Keywords:

Ethnic Identity, Subethnicity, Chinese Americans, Taiwanese Americans, Transnationalism, Homeland Politics
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MLA Citation:

Lien, Pei-te. "Places of Socialization and (Sub)ethnic Identities among Asian Immigrants in the United States: Evidence from the Chinese American Homeland Politics Survey, 2007" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the APSA 2008 Annual Meeting, Hynes Convention Center, Boston, Massachusetts, Aug 28, 2008 <Not Available>. 2009-05-23 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p281085_index.html>

APA Citation:

Lien, P. , 2008-08-28 "Places of Socialization and (Sub)ethnic Identities among Asian Immigrants in the United States: Evidence from the Chinese American Homeland Politics Survey, 2007" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the APSA 2008 Annual Meeting, Hynes Convention Center, Boston, Massachusetts Online <APPLICATION/PDF>. 2009-05-23 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p281085_index.html

Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript
Abstract: Abstract: This research provides an empirical assessment of the relationship between places of socialization and ethnic self-identity preferences among Asian immigrants in the United States from separate parts of a politically divided homeland. Does place of socialization influence the (sub)ethnic self-identity of Chinese Americans growing up in China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong? How do socialization context and transnational political concerns, among other factors, help structure the relationship? Benefitting from recent advancements in targeted ethnic sampling and telephone survey methodology, this essay examines results of the 2007 Chinese American Homeland Politics survey to study the contour and sources of ethnic identity preferences among Chinese in the United States from separate homeland origins. We test 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.

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Associated Document Available APSA 2008 Annual Meeting

Document Type: application/pdf
Page count: 35
Word count: 10783
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Places of Socialization and (Sub)ethnic Identities among Asian Immigrants in the United States: Evidence from the 2007 Chinese American Homeland Politics Survey Pei-te Lien Department of Political Science University of California Santa Barbara Santa Barbara CA 93106-9420 plien@polsci.ucsb.edu (Forthcoming from Asian Ethnicity 9(3):151-170) Prepared for presentation at the 2008 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association August 28-31 Boston. The author appreciates financial support from the Chang Ching-Kuo Foundation for International Scholarly Exchange the Taiwan Foundation for Democracy
-.096 .345 Ethnic Organization -.175 .174 Activism Model Chi-square 226.6 245.1 279.2 283.0 -2 Log Likelihood 277.3 258.8 224.6 220.9 % Predicted Correct 86 89 91.6 91.4 Nagelkerke R Square .559 .595 .660 .667 Source and Note: (see Table 3) *** p≤.001 **p≤.005 *p≤.05 #p≤.10 34


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