From Immigrants to Americans: Race and Assimilation During the Great Migration

Soumyajit Mazumder
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引用次数: 69

Abstract

How does the arrival of a new minority group affect the social acceptance and outcomes of existing minorities? We study this question in the context of the First Great Migration. Between 1915 and 1930, 1.5 million African Americans moved from the U.S. South to Northern urban centres, which were home to millions of European immigrants arrived in previous decades. We formalize and empirically test the hypothesis that the inflows of Black Americans changed perceptions of outgroup distance among native-born whites, reducing the barriers to the social integration of European immigrants. Predicting Black in-migration with a version of the shift-share instrument, we find that immigrants living in areas that received more Black migrants experienced higher assimilation along a range of outcomes, such as naturalization rates and intermarriages with native-born spouses. Evidence from the historical press and patterns of heterogeneity across immigrant nationalities provide additional support to the role of shifting perceptions of the white majority.
从移民到美国人:大迁徙时期的种族与同化
一个新的少数群体的到来如何影响社会对现有少数群体的接受程度和结果?我们在第一次大迁徙的背景下研究这个问题。1915年至1930年间,150万非洲裔美国人从美国南部迁往北部城市中心,而在此之前的几十年里,数百万欧洲移民曾在这里定居。我们对以下假设进行了形式化和实证检验:美国黑人的流入改变了本土出生的白人对外群体距离的看法,减少了欧洲移民融入社会的障碍。用一种偏移份额工具来预测黑人移民,我们发现,生活在接收更多黑人移民地区的移民在一系列结果上经历了更高的同化,比如入籍率和与本地出生的配偶的异族婚姻。来自历史媒体的证据和移民国籍的异质性模式为白人多数观念的转变提供了额外的支持。
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