Inheriting the city
Work detail
From the publisher: Inheriting the City examines five immigrant groups to disentangle the complicated question of how they are faring relative to native-born groups, and how achievement differs between and within these groups. While some experts worry that these young adults would not do as well as previous waves of immigrants due to lack of high-paying manufacturing jobs, poor public schools, and an entrenched racial divide, Inheriting the City finds that the second generation is rapidly moving into the mainstream--speaking English, working in jobs that resemble those held by native New Yorkers their age, and creatively combining their ethnic cultures and norms with American ones. Far from descending into an urban underclass, the children of immigrants are using immigrant advantages to avoid some of the obstacles that native minority groups cannot.
Overview
Shared work-level identity and catalog context.
Contributors
People credited with this work in the active catalog.
- Open Author
Mary C. Waters
- Open Author
Jennifer Holdaway
- Open Author
John H. Mollenkopf
- Open Author
Philip Kasinitz
- Open Author
Philip Kasnitz
- Open Author
John H. Mollenkopf
Editions
Publication-specific versions linked to this work only.
- Image source: Open LibraryIT
Inheriting the city
- Image source: Open LibraryIT
Inheriting the City
- ITInheriting the CityPhilip Kasnitz, John H. Mollenkopf, Mary C. Waters, Jennifer Holdaway
Inheriting the City
- ITInheriting the city
Inheriting the city
- ITInheriting the city
Inheriting the city
- ITInheriting the city
Inheriting the city