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The Integration Paradox: A Review and Meta-Analysis of the Complex Relationship Between Integration and Reports of Discrimination
[journal article]
Abstract Social science research has produced evidence of an "integration paradox": immigrants and their descendants who appear to have greater access to mainstream middle-class society, as indicated by their education or labor market success, often report experiencing more discrimination. Several explanatio... view more
Social science research has produced evidence of an "integration paradox": immigrants and their descendants who appear to have greater access to mainstream middle-class society, as indicated by their education or labor market success, often report experiencing more discrimination. Several explanations have been put forth to account for this counterintuitive pattern, supported by a wealth of empirical evidence. To assess the reliable insights generated by this line of research, this article presents a review and meta-analytic analysis of the integration paradox. The article reviews the major theoretical arguments advanced in literature, and derives crucial hypotheses concerning the phenomenon's overall nature, underlying mechanisms, and two key moderating conditions. Specifically, it discusses how factors like better education, which appear to signal improved integration into mainstream society, may also lead to greater exposure to mainstream members, heightened familiarity with exclusionary public discourse, or a heightened risk of downward social mobility. By increasing cognitive susceptibility to framing experiences in terms of discrimination or simply the opportunities to encounter discrimination, these mechanisms are expected to increase reports of discrimination. To test these propositions, the study summarizes and evaluates 280 statistical estimates published in 42 studies, utilizing recent developments in multilevel meta-analysis. The findings support the credibility of the integration paradox, particularly for immigrant minorities who are easily distinguishable from the mainstream and for those who reside in countries with a more open socio-political context of reception. However, the results also suggest that additional research is needed to fully comprehend the underlying mechanisms of the paradox.... view less
Keywords
migration background; integration; discrimination
Classification
Migration, Sociology of Migration
Free Keywords
integration paradox; meta-analysis
Document language
English
Publication Year
2024
Page/Pages
p. 1384-1409
Journal
International Migration Review, 58 (2024) 3
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/01979183231170809
ISSN
1747-7379
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed
Licence
Deposit Licence - No Redistribution, No Modifications
FundingFunded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) - grant number 428878477