不健康的同化还是构成差异?将移民的心理健康轨迹与居住时间区分开来

IF 4.6 2区 社会学 Q1 DEMOGRAPHY
Claudia Brunori
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引用次数: 0

摘要

研究往往发现,新移民的心理健康状况优于本地人,而老移民则没有这种优势。这可以被解释为移民的心理健康随着居住时间的延长而恶化的证据--"不健康的同化假说"。然而,文献中使用的方法并不适合评估新移民和已定居移民之间的心理健康差异是由于个人层面的心理健康恶化、移民群体之间的构成差异还是选择性再移民造成的。这是因为以往的研究大多依赖于横截面数据,存在过度控制偏差,以及/或者未能将抵达后随时间的变化与随年龄或不同组群的变化区分开来。在本文中,我提出了一种新的分析策略来检验不健康同化假说。通过使用按移民抵达年龄分层的固定效应和随机效应回归,以及英国家庭纵向研究第 1-11 波的数据,我发现没有证据表明移民的心理健康会随着抵达时间的推移而恶化:移民的心理健康轨迹与本地人的年龄轨迹一致,而更成熟的移民心理健康更差的横截面发现是由不同时间移民的个体之间的差异造成的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Unhealthy Assimilation or Compositional Differences? Disentangling Immigrants' Mental Health Trajectories with Residence Duration
Studies have often found that recent immigrants have better mental health than natives, whereas established immigrants have no such advantage. This could be interpreted as evidence for immigrants' mental health deteriorating with residence duration—the “unhealthy assimilation hypothesis.” However, the methods used in the literature are unfit to assess whether the mental health differences between recent and established immigrants are due to individual‐level deterioration in mental health, compositional differences between immigration cohorts, or selective remigration. This is because previous studies mostly rely on cross‐sectional data, incur in overcontrol bias, and/or fail to disentangle variation with time since arrival from variation with age or between cohorts. In this article, I propose a novel analytical strategy to test the unhealthy assimilation hypothesis. Using fixed‐ and random‐effect regressions stratified by immigrants' age at arrival and data from waves 1–11 of the UK household longitudinal study, I find no evidence that immigrants' mental health deteriorates with time since arrival: immigrants' mental health trajectories are in line with natives' trajectories with age, and the cross‐sectional finding of more established immigrants having worse mental health is driven by differences between individuals who migrated at different times.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
4.00%
发文量
60
期刊介绍: Population and Development Review is essential reading to keep abreast of population studies, research on the interrelationships between population and socioeconomic change, and related thinking on public policy. Its interests span both developed and developing countries, theoretical advances as well as empirical analyses and case studies, a broad range of disciplinary approaches, and concern with historical as well as present-day problems.
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