Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access
Open Access Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Restricted Access Subscription Access

Immigrant Women's Identity and Integration: Liverpool, "The World in One City"


Affiliations
1 Liverpool John Moores University, United Kingdom
     

   Subscribe/Renew Journal


This article is based on the original research that studied immigrant women who have been living in Liverpool since 2001. It deals with issues concerning the identity of immigrant women. One of the aims was to identify if there was a difference between subjective perception and findings derived from an objective evaluation of their integration based on the collected data. The study, conducted in Liverpool in 2009, explores the choices immigrant women have made with respect to their preferred identity, i.e. by nationality, religion, or ethnicity. The inductive explorative research is postpositivist in approach and a questionnaire was used to collect primary data. The results have demonstrated how the various challenges immigrants face when moving to another country influence their choice of identity. Their preference of identification by nationality, religion and ethnic group helped to define the level of integration of these women within the wider society. The study has found that the way the respondents wanted to be identified depended on a number of factors; degree of integration, knowledge of the local language, and participation in the local community. The quantitative method and the multiple correspondence analyses have enabled the mapping profile of the sample and have demonstrated the existence of spatial urban self-segregation. The study shows that these women live in their diaspora space rather than within the wider community.

Keywords

Identity, Women Immigrants, Self-Segregation.
Subscription Login to verify subscription
User
Notifications
Font Size

  • Anderson, Benedict. 2006. Imagined Communities. London: Verso.
  • Awad, Abdul Karim 2010. Al-Islam Religion and Life. First ed. London: Message of Islam.
  • Bechhofer, Frank, David Mac Crone, Richard Kiely, and Robert Stewart. 1999. "Constructing National Identity: Arts and Landed Elites in Scotland." Sociology no. 33:515.
  • Belchem, John et al. 2006. Liverpool 800. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press.
  • Bertali, Nunzia. 2004. Italian Women immigrants to the North of England 1945-1961: Changing perception of exclusion and integration. Language School, John Moores University, Liverpool. Thesis.
  • Blumer, Herbert 1937. Man and society: A substantive Introduction to the Social Science. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice Hall.
  • Buijs, Gina 1993. Migrant women: crossing boundaries and changing identities. Oxford, U.K.: Berg Oxford International Publisher Ltd.
  • Buruma, Ian. 2007. Tariq Ramadan Has an Identity Issue. The New York Times. New York.
  • Chen, Carolyn. 2002. "The religious Varieties of Ethnic Presence: A Comparison between a Taiwanese immigrant Buddhist Temple and an Evangelical Christian Church."Sociology of Religion no. 63 (2):215-238.
  • Chistolini, Sandra 1986. Donne Scozzesi. Roma: Centro Studi Emigrazione.
  • Di Cristo Bertali, Nunzia. 2011. Liverpool,"The world in one city"; Subjective and objective perceptions evaluation of the integration of women immigrants in Liverpool, 2001 to 2009. Business School, John Moores University, Liverpool. PhD Thesis.
  • Di Cristo Bertali, Nunzia. 2012. Subjective vs. Objective integration of foreign women in Liverpool: Lambert Academic Publishing.
  • Ebaugh, Rose Helen, and Janet Saltzman Chafetz. 2000. Religion and the New Immigrants: Continuities and Adoptions in immigrant Congregations. Walnut Creek, CA: AltaMira Press.
  • Erikson, Erick H. 1972. Childhood and Society. Edited by Erik H Erikson. 2nd edition ed. Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin Books.
  • Feher, Shoshanah, and Yang Fenggang. 1998. From the river of Babylon to the valleys of Los Angeles: the exodus and adaptation of Iranian Jews. Edited by Worner R.S. and Wittner J. G., Gathering in the Diaspora: religious communities and the new immigration. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
  • Foote, Nelson 1951. "Identification as the Basis for a theory of motivation." American Sociological Review, no. 16 (1):14-21.
  • Gabaccia, Donna, and Vicky Ruiz 2006. "Migrations and Destinations: Reflections on the History of U.S. Immigrant Women." Journal of American Ethnic History no. 26 (1):3-19.
  • Gellner, Ernest 1983. nations and nationalism. Oxford: Basil Blackwell Publisher.
  • Gibson, Margareth A. 1988. Accommodation without assimilation: Sikh immigrants in an American High School. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
  • Gleason, Philip 1983. "Identifying Identity: A Semantic History." Journal of American History no. 69 (4):910-931.
  • Haddad, Yvonne Hasbeck. 2004. Not quite Americans? The shaping of Arab and Muslim identity in the United States. Waco, TX: Baylor University Press.
  • Handlin, Oscar 1951. The Upischolar_mained: The Epic Story of the Great Migrations that Made the American People. Boston: Little Brown & Co. Hastings, Adrian 1997. The Construction of Nationhood, Ethnicity, Religion and Nationalism. Cambridge: Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge.
  • Hegel, George Wilhelm Friedrich. 1972. Philosophy of Right. Translated by Knox T.M. Clarendon: Oxford.
  • Herberg, Will. 1955. Protestant, Catholic, Jew: An Essay in American Religious Sociology. Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Co.
  • Hirschman, Charles. 2004. "The Role of Religion in the Origins and Adaptation of Immigrant Groups in the United States." International Migration Review no. 38 (3):1206-1233.
  • Hobsbawm, Eric John. 1990. Nations and nationalism since 1780. Cambridge: Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge.
  • Ibrahim, Farah.; Hifumi Ohnishi.; Daya Singh Sandhu. 1997. "Asian American Identity Development : A Culture Specific Model for South Asian Americans." Journal of Multicultural Counselling & Development no. 25 (1):34-50.
  • Im, Eun-Ok.; Keming Yang. 2006. "Theories on Immigrant Women's Health." Health Care for Women International no. 27 (8):666-681. doi: 10.1080/07399330600817535.
  • Jasso, Guillermina.; Douglas S. Massey.; Mark R. Rosenzweig.; James P. Smith. 2000. " The New Immigrant Survey Pilot (NIS-P): Overview and New Findings about U.S. Legal Immigrants at Admission." Population Association of America no. 37 (1):127-138.
  • Kahane, Renee. 1986. "Informal Agencies of Socialization and the Integration of Immigrants Youth into Society: An Example from Israel." International migration Review no. 20 (1):21-39.
  • Kurien, Prema. 1998. Becoming American by Becoming Hindu: Indian American Take Their Place at the Multicultural Table, In Gathering in Diaspora: Religious Communities and the New Immigration. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
  • Letourneau Nicole.; Allen Marion 1999. Post-positivistic critical multiplism: a beginning dialogue. Journal of Advanced Nursing n.30, (3): 623-630.
  • Locke, John. 1959. An Essay on Human Understanding: 1 of 2. Edited by Alexander Fraser, Campbell,. 21st edition ed. New York.
  • Massey, Douglas S. 1981. "Dimensions of the new immigration to the United States and the prospects for assimilation." Annual Reviews no. 7:57-85.
  • Mc Crone, David.; Frank. Bechhofer. 2008. "National identity and social inclusion." Ethnic and Racial Studies no. 31:1245-1266.
  • McIlvanney, William. 1999 Freeing ourselves from inner exile'. Herald Scotland, http://www.heraldscotland.com/sport/spl/aberdeen/freeing-ourselves-fron-inner-exile.
  • McIntyre-Brown, Arabella., Fiona Shaw ; Guy Woodland. 2005. Connections: Liverpool Global Gateway Birkenhead: Garlic Press Publishing Ltd.
  • Mehra, Rekha. 1997. "Women, Empowerment and Economic Development." Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science no. 554:136-149.
  • Nesdale, Drew. and Anita S. Mak. 2000. "Immigrant Acculturation Attitudes and Host Country Identification." Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology no. 10:483-495.
  • Norton, Bonny. 1997. "Language, Identity, and the Ownership of English." Tesol Quarterly no. 31 (3).
  • Pedraza, Silvia. 1991. "Women and migration: The Social Consequences of Gender." Annual Rev. Sociol. no. 17:303-325.
  • Peek, Lori. 2005. "Becoming Muslim: The Development of a Religious Identity." Sociology of Religion no. 66 (3):215-242.
  • Perry, John. 1975. Personal Identity. London-England: University of California Press.
  • Phinney, Jean S.; Gabriel Horenczyk; Karmela Liebkind; Paul Vedder. 2001. "Ethnic Identity, Immigration, and well-Being: an Interactional Perspective." Social Issue no. 57 (3):493-510.
  • Portes, Alejandro, and Ruben G. Rumbaut. 2006. Immigrant America: A Portrait. Third ed. ed. London, England: University of California Press.
  • Rayaprol, Aparna. 1997. Negotiating identities: Women in the Indian Diaspora. Deli-New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Rhodes, Lori Jan. 2010. Through the same lens but from a different angle": Latino ethnic identity formation in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1968-1974. Stanford University. Dissertation PhD.
  • Rumbaut, Ruben G. 1994. "The Crucible within: Ethnic Identity, Self-Esteem, and Segmented Assimilation among Children of Immigrants." International Migration Review no. 28 (4):748-794.
  • Saunders, Mark, Philip Lewis, and Adrian Thornhill. 2007. Research Methods for business students. fourth edition ed. Harlow: Financial Times Prentice Hall.
  • Saunders, Peter. 1986. Social Theory and the Urban Question. Second edition ed: Routledge.
  • Simon, Rita J.; Caroline B. Brettel. 1986. In International Migration: The Female Experience. Edited by N.J. Totowa and Rowman and Allanheld.
  • Smith, Timothy L. 1978. "Religion and Ethnicity in America." The American Historical Review no. 83 (5):1155-1185.
  • Tastsoglou, Evangelia, and Baukje Miedema. 2000. Immigrant women organizing for change: integration and community development by immigrant women in the maritime. Final Report to the Prairie Centre of Excellence for Research on Immigration and Integration.
  • Trochim, William M. K. 2001. "The research methods knowledge base." Atomic Dog Pub., 2001, Cornell University.
  • Vlachova, Klara. 2009. "Identity of Non-Self-Evident Nation: Czech National Identity After the Break-up of Czechoslovakia and Before Accession to the European Union." Nations and Nationalism no. 15 (2):254-279.
  • Watts, Susan J. 1983. "Marriage migration, A neglected form of long-term mobility. A case study from Ilorin, Nigeria." " Int. Migration Review no. 17:682-98.
  • Weber, Max. 1978. Economy and Society. Edited by Gwenther Roth and Claus Wittich. Vol. One. London: University of California Press.
  • Williams, Raymond Brady. 1988. Religions of immigrants from India and Pakistan: New Threads in the American Tapestry. USA: Cambridge University Press.
  • Yang, Fenggang.; Rose Helen Ebaugh. 2002. "Religion and Ethnicity Among New Immigrants: The Impact of Majority/Minority Status in Home and Host Countries." Journal for the scientific study of religion no. 40 (3):367-378.
  • Yuval-Davis, Nira. 1993. Women Ethnicity and Empowerment. In Women's Studies Conference. Preston, UK. Working paper series No. 151.

Abstract Views: 183

PDF Views: 0




  • Immigrant Women's Identity and Integration: Liverpool, "The World in One City"

Abstract Views: 183  |  PDF Views: 0

Authors

Nunzia Di Cristo Bertali
Liverpool John Moores University, United Kingdom
Jarmila Hickman
Liverpool John Moores University, United Kingdom

Abstract


This article is based on the original research that studied immigrant women who have been living in Liverpool since 2001. It deals with issues concerning the identity of immigrant women. One of the aims was to identify if there was a difference between subjective perception and findings derived from an objective evaluation of their integration based on the collected data. The study, conducted in Liverpool in 2009, explores the choices immigrant women have made with respect to their preferred identity, i.e. by nationality, religion, or ethnicity. The inductive explorative research is postpositivist in approach and a questionnaire was used to collect primary data. The results have demonstrated how the various challenges immigrants face when moving to another country influence their choice of identity. Their preference of identification by nationality, religion and ethnic group helped to define the level of integration of these women within the wider society. The study has found that the way the respondents wanted to be identified depended on a number of factors; degree of integration, knowledge of the local language, and participation in the local community. The quantitative method and the multiple correspondence analyses have enabled the mapping profile of the sample and have demonstrated the existence of spatial urban self-segregation. The study shows that these women live in their diaspora space rather than within the wider community.

Keywords


Identity, Women Immigrants, Self-Segregation.

References