“They Keep an Eye on You”: Minority Pressure and its Implications for Dual Identity Among Six Immigrant Groups in the Netherlands

Diana Cárdenas, F. Fleischmann
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

The present study analyses perceived pressure to conform to minority group norms and examines its implications for identity (in-)compatibility among six immigrant groups in the Netherlands ( N = 5,783). We analyzed whether orientation toward the majority and minority and the perceived diversity climate explained individual and group differences in perceived minority pressure. Subsequently, we estimated multigroup models to examine whether perceived pressure moderated the association between minority and majority identifications. We found substantial group differences in perceived pressure that were not well explained by orientation toward the majority and minority groups, or the perceived diversity climate. Immigrants who had spent a larger proportion of their life in the receiving society experienced more, but those who had more work experience in the Netherlands experienced less pressure. Perceived pressure was higher the more the Netherlands was perceived as hospitable for immigrants, but also at higher levels of perceived intergroup hostility. Minority and majority group identifications were negatively associated across all six immigrant groups, but only among the Moroccan-Dutch did perceived pressure significantly moderate this association. Specifically, identifications became more compatible (i.e., more positively associated) at lower levels of pressure, a trend that we also observed among all other groups except the Turkish-Dutch; yet in these groups the interaction, though similar in magnitude and direction, was not statistically significant. We concluded that minority group dynamics may contribute to the (in-)compatibility of multiple group identifications, but more research is needed to understand the group characteristics that explain perceived minority pressure and its implications for minority members’ identification patterns.
“他们盯着你”:荷兰六个移民群体的少数民族压力及其对双重身份的影响
本研究分析了符合少数群体规范的感知压力,并考察了荷兰六个移民群体(N = 5,783)对身份(内)兼容性的影响。我们分析了多数取向和少数取向以及感知多样性气候是否解释了个体和群体在感知少数群体压力方面的差异。随后,我们估计了多群体模型,以检验感知压力是否调节了少数群体和多数群体认同之间的关联。我们发现在感知到的压力上存在着巨大的群体差异,这种差异并不能很好地解释为对多数群体和少数群体的取向,或者感知到的多样性气候。在接收社会中度过较大比例生活的移民经历更多,但在荷兰有更多工作经验的移民经历的压力更小。感知到的压力越大,荷兰被认为对移民越友好,但感知到的群体间敌意也越高。在所有六个移民群体中,少数群体和多数群体的认同都呈负相关,但只有摩洛哥-荷兰人的感知压力显著缓和了这种联系。具体来说,在较低的压力水平下,识别变得更加兼容(即更积极地相关),我们也在除土耳其-荷兰人以外的所有其他群体中观察到这一趋势;然而,在这些群体中,这种相互作用虽然在幅度和方向上相似,但在统计上并不显著。我们的结论是,少数群体动态可能有助于多元群体认同的兼容性,但需要更多的研究来了解解释感知少数群体压力的群体特征及其对少数群体成员认同模式的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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