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Strangers to these Shores, Census Update Vincent N. Parrillo

Strangers to these Shores, Census Update By Vincent N. Parrillo

Strangers to these Shores, Census Update by Vincent N. Parrillo


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Strangers to these Shores, Census Update Summary

Strangers to these Shores, Census Update by Vincent N. Parrillo

This top-selling comprehensive text examines racial and ethnic relations in the U.S. from a sociohistorical perspective. It integrates the three main theoretical perspectives and the experiences of more than 50 racial, ethnic, religious, and other groups.

What is the Pearson Census Update Program?

The Census Update edition incorporates 2010 Census data into a course-simply and easily. The components of the Census Update Program are as follows:

  • Census Update Edition - Features fully updated data throughout the text-including all charts and graphs-to reflect the results of the 2010 Census. This edition also includes a reproduction of the 2010 Census Questionnaire for your students to explore in detail.
  • 2010 Census Update Primer - A brief seven-chapter overview of the Census, including important information about the Constitutional mandate, research methods, who is affected by the Census, and how data is used. Additionally, the primer explores key contemporary topics such as race and ethnicity, the family, and poverty. The primer can be packaged with any Pearson text at no additional cost, and is available via MySocLab, MySocKit, and MySearchLab. The primer can also be purchased standalone.
    • 2010 Census Update Primer Instructor's Manual with Test Bank - Includes explanations of what has been updated, in-class activities, homework activities associated with the MyLabs and MyKits, discussion questions for the primer, and test questions related to the primer.
  • MySocLab - Gives students the opportunity to explore the methods and data and apply the results in a dynamic interactive online environment. It includes:
    • primary source readings relevant to the Census
    • an online version of the 2010 Census Update Primer
    • a series of activities using 2010 Census results
    • video clips explaining and exploring the Census

Strangers to these Shores, Census Update Reviews

Provides not only an excellent survey and analysis of prominent issues...but also offers sharp and empirically sound studies of the ethnoracial, gender, and other minority groups in the United States. One of the best texts in race and ethnic relations.

Stanford M. Lyman, Florida Atlantic University

A common word used in the assessment of this book by several sociologists is comprehensive....We are invited to read in the pages that follow the story of a resilient society that is struggling to achieve unity out of diversity and, at the same time, guarantee the right to be different....Of special value in this book are the sociological concepts and theories in Part I that are helpful in interpreting and understanding how and why strangers to these shores have adapted to the customs of this country they way they have....Professor Parrillo has made a major contribution to the study of intergroup relations.

Charles V. Willie, Harvard University

Strangers to These Shores is...a comprehensive examination of the sharpest edges and more nuanced qualities of American pluralism. In its 15 chapters, Professor Parrillo provides students/readers-and those for whom it is not assigned!-with a well conceived, carefully constructed, and highly readable introduction to a very complex subject.

Peter I. Rose, Smith College

Parrillo effectively captures the creative energy and tension of the multiracial, multiethnic reality that is American reality-historically, theoretically, and empirically.

Walda Katz-Fishman, Howard University

A theoretically informed and historically rich account...with a comprehensive, up-to-date treatment [that] makes it an indispensable guide to the evolution and current state of minority-majority relations. I recommend it highly for classroom use.

Richard D. Alba, CUNY Graduate Center

How wonderful to find between the covers of a single volume the experiences of more than a hundred ethnic groups in America presented in concise fashion against a backdrop of major sociological themes.

Betty Lee Sung, CUNY

From its opening reflections on the stranger as a social phenomenon to its thoughtful conclusion on the nature and future of the American mosaic, Strangers to These Shores remains one of the best textbooks ever published on race and ethnic relations in the United States. Freshly updated with an eye for detail, engagingly written and a pleasure to read, this new edition practices what it preaches: Parrillo takes diversity in America seriously and seeks to understand it through historically-grounded analyses of the variety of patterns of majority-minority relations and with richly drawn portraits of scores of groups who have made this the world's most ethnically diverse society. An excellent introduction to a challenging, complex, and ever-changing field of study.

Ruben G. Rumbaut, University of California, Irvine

About Vincent N. Parrillo

Born and raised in Paterson, New Jersey, Vincent N. Parrillo experienced multiculturalism early as the son of a second-generation Italian American father and Irish/German American mother. He grew up in an ethnically diverse neighborhood, developing friendships and teenage romances with second- and third-generation Dutch, German, Italian, and Polish Americans. As he grew older, he developed other friendships that frequently crossed racial and religious lines.

Professor Parrillo came to the field of sociology after first completing a bachelor's degree in business management and a master's degree in English. After teaching high school English and then serving as a college administrator, he took his first sociology course when he began doctoral studies at Rutgers University. Inspired by a discipline that scientifically investigates social issues, he changed his major and completed his degree in sociology.

Leaving his administrative post but staying at William Paterson University, Prof. Parrillo has since taught sociology for more than 30 years. He has lectured throughout the United States, Canada, and Europe and has regularly conducted diversity leadership programs for the military and large corporations. His keynote address at a bilingual educators' conference was published in Vital Speeches of the Day, which normally contains only speeches by national political leaders and heads of corporations and organizations.

Prof. Parrillo was a Fulbright Scholar in the Czech Republic and Scholar-in-Residence at the University of Pisa. He was the keynote speaker at international conferences in Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Germany, Italy, Poland, and Sweden. He has met with government leaders, nongovernment agency leaders, law enforcement officials, and educators in more than a dozen countries as a consultant on immigration policy, hate crimes, and multicultural education. He has done on-air interviews with Radio Free Europe and Voice of America, appeared on national Canadian television, and been interviewed by numerous Canadian and European reporters.

Prof. Parrillo's ventures into U.S. media include writing, narrating, and producing two PBS award-winning documentaries, Ellis Island: Gateway to America and Smokestacks and Steeples: A Portrait of Paterson. Contacted by reporters across the nation for his views on race and ethnic relations, he has been quoted in dozens of newspapers, including the ChicagoSun-Times, Cincinnati Inquirer, Houston Chronicle, Hartford Courant, Omaha World-Herald, Orlando Sentinel, and Virginian Pilot. He has appeared on numerous U.S. radio and television programs.

Prof. Parrillo is also the author of Understanding Race and Ethnic Relations, third edition (Allyn & Bacon), Contemporary Social Problems, sixth edition (Allyn & Bacon), Cities and Urban Life, fourth edition (with John Macionis), Diversity in America, second edition, and Rethinking Today's Minorities. His articles and book reviews have appeared in journals such as The Social Science Journal, Sociological Forum, Social Forces, Journal of Comparative Family Studies, Journal of American Ethnic History, and the Encyclopedia of American Immigration. He is General Editor of the Encyclopedia of Sociology for Sage Publications. Several of his books and articles have been translated into other languages, including Chinese, Czech, Danish, German, Italian, Japanese, Polish, and Swedish.

An active participant in various capacities throughout the years in the American Sociological Association and Eastern Sociological Society, Prof. Parrillo has been listed in Who's Who in International Education, Outstanding Educators of America, American Men and Women of Science, and Who's Who in the East. In 2004, he received the Award for Excellence in Scholarship from William Paterson University. In March 2005, the Eastern Sociological Society named him its Robin M. Williams, Jr. Distinguished Lecturer for 2005-2006, and elected him as its vice president for 2008-2009.

Table of Contents

IN THIS SECTION:

1. BRIEF

2. COMPREHENSIVE

3. FEATURES

BRIEF TABLE OF CONTENTS

Part I The Sociological Framework

Chapter 1 The Study of Minorities

Chapter 2 Culture and Social Structure

Chapter 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Chapter 4 Intergroup Relations

Part II European Americans

Chapter 5 Northern and Western Europeans

Chapter 6 Southern, Central, and East European Americans

Part III Visible Minorities

Chapter 7 Native Americans

Chapter 8 Asian Americans

Chapter 9 Middle Eastern and North African Americans

Chapter 10 Black Americans

Chapter 11 Hispanic Americans


Part IV Other Minorities

Chapter 12 Religious Minorities

Chapter 13 Women as a Minority Group

Chapter 14 Gays, People with Disabilities, and the Elderly

Part V Contemporary Patterns and Issues

Chapter 15 The Ever-Changing U.S. Mosaic

COMPREHENSIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS

Part I Sociological Framework

Chapter 1 The Study of Minorities

The Stranger as a Social Phenomenon

Similarity and Attraction

Social Distance

Perceptions

Interactions

Minority Groups

Minority-Group Characteristics

Racial and Ethnic Groups

Ethnocentrism

In the United States

In Other Times and Lands

Eurocentrism and Afrocentrism

Objectivity

The Dillingham Flaw

Personal Troubles and Public Issues

The Dynamics of Intergroup Relations

Sociological Perspectives

Functionalist Theory

Conflict Theory

Interactionist Theory

Retrospect

Chapter 2 Culture and Social Structure

The Concept of Culture

The Reality Construct

Language and Other Symbols

Cultural Change

Cultural Diffusion

Borrowed Elements

Subcultures

Convergent Subcultures

Persistent Subcultures

Structural Conditions

Stratification

Social Class

Class Consciousness

Ethnicity and Social Class

Blaming the Poor or Society?

Family Disintegration

Perpetuation of Poverty

Criticism

Intergroup Conflict

Cultural Differentiation

Structural Differentiation

Ethnic Stratification

The Power-Differential Theory

The Internal-Colonialism Theory

Challenges to the Status Quo

Is There a White Culture?

Retrospect

Chapter 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice

The Psychology of Prejudice

Levels of Prejudice

Self-Justification

Personality

Frustration

The Sociology of Prejudice

Socialization

Economic Competition

Social Norms

Stereotyping

Ethnophaulisms

Ethnic Humor

The Influence of Television

Perpetuation of Stereotypes

Influencing of Attitudes

The Influence of Advertising and Music

Advertising

Music

Can Prejudice Be Reduced?

Interaction

Education

Diversity Training

Discrimination

Levels of Discrimination

Relationships between Prejudice and Discrimination

The Unprejudiced Nondiscriminator

The Unprejudiced Discriminator

The Prejudiced Nondiscriminator

The Prejudiced Discriminator

Social and Institutional Discrimination

The Affirmative-Action Controversy

The Concepts of Justice, Liberty, and Equality

Affirmative Action Begins

Court Challenges and Rulings

Has Affirmative Action Worked?

Public Opinion

Racial Profiling

Retrospect

Chapter 4 Intergroup Relations

Minority-Group Responses

Ethnic- and Racial-Group Identity

Avoidance

Deviance

Defiance

Acceptance

Consequences of Minority-Group Status

Negative Self-Image

The Vicious-Circle Phenomenon

Marginality

Middleman Minorities

Dominant-Group Responses

Legislative Controls

Segregation

Expulsion

Xenophobia

Annihilation

Hate Groups

Hate Crimes

Exploitation

Minority-Minority Relations

Theories of Minority Integration

Assimilation (Anglo-Conformity) Theory

Anglo-Conformity

Types of Assimilation

Amalgamation (Melting-Pot) Theory

Advocates

Did We Melt?

Accommodation (Pluralistic) Theory

Early Analysis

Pluralistic Reality

Dual Realities

Retrospect

Part II European Americans

Chapter 5 North and West European Americans

Sociohistorical Perspective

The Colonial Period

Cultural Diversity

Religious Intolerance

The Early National Period

The 1790 Census

Early Signs of Nativist Reactions

Xenophobia

Legislative Action

The Pre-Civil War Period

Structural Conditions

Xenophobia

English Americans

The Departure

Culture Shock

Resisting Assimilation

English Influence

Dutch Americans

Structural Conditions

Pluralism

French Americans

Marginality and Assimilation

Francophobia

Pluralism

Louisiana French

French Canadians

German Americans

Early Reactions

The Second Wave: Segregation and Pluralism

Societal Responses

Cultural Impact

Irish Americans

Cultural Differentiation

Societal Reaction and Finding Jobs

Minority Response

Actions and Reactions

Labor Conflict

Upward Mobility

The New Irish

Scandinavian Americans

Ingroup Solidarity

Ethnic Identity

Social Realities for Women

Assimilation

Sociological Analysis

The Functionalist View

The Conflict View

The Interactionist View

Retrospect

Chapter 6 South, Central, and East European Americans

Sociohistorical Perspective

The Push-Pull Factors

Structural Conditions

Societal Reaction

Racism

Americanization

Xenophobia

Legislative Action

Slavic Americans

Earlier Immigrants

Recent Immigrants

Polish Americans

Culture Shock

Community Organization

Polish Americans Today

Russian Americans

Life in the United States

Xenophobia

Recent Immigrants

Ukrainian Americans

Earlier Immigrants

Recent Immigrants

Hungarian Americans

Labor Conditions

Recent Immigrants

Italian Americans

The Great Migration

Societal Hostility

Social Patterns

Marginality

Social Mobility

Italian Americans Today

Greek Americans

Occupational Distribution

Social Patterns

Societal Reaction

Greek Americans Today

Romani Americans

Cultural Differentiation

Evasive Pluralism

Immigrant Women and Work

Assimilation

Sociological Analysis

The Functionalist View

The Conflict View

The Interactionist View

Retrospect

Part III Visible Minorities

Chapter 7 Native Americans

Sociohistorical Perspective

Early Encounters

Cultural Strains

Differing Values

Values and Social Structure

Stereotyping

Changes in Government Policies

Indian Removal Act

Expulsion

The Cherokee

Reservations and Dependence

Indian Reorganization Act

The Relocation Program

The Termination Act

Present-Day Native American Life

Population

Education

Improvement

Tribal Colleges and Universities

Employment

Tribal Enterprise

The New Buffalo

Health Concerns

Suicide and Violence

Alcohol Abuse

Housing

Natural Resources

Environmental Issues

Blackfeet

Navajo

Southern Ute

Council of Energy Resource Tribes

Environmental Racism

Water Rights

Red Power

Pan-Indianism

Militancy

The Courts

Bureau of Indian Affairs

Urban Native Americans

Cultural Impact

Assimilation

Sociological Analysis

The Conflict View

The Interactionist View

Retrospect

Chapter 8 Asian Americans

Sociohistorical Perspective

Cultural Attributes

The Chinese

Structural Conditions

Societal Reaction

Legislative Action

Avoidance and Segregation

Social Factors

Recent Immigrants

Socioeconomic Characteristics

The Japanese

Economic Competition

National Policy

Expulsion and Imprisonment

Recent Immigrants

The Filipinos

Early Immigrants

The Scarcity of Filipino Women

Recent Immigrants

The Koreans

Early Immigrants

Recent Immigrants

The Role of the Church

Occupational Adaptation

The Asian Indians

Early Immigrants

Societal Reaction

Minority Response

Recent Immigrants

The Pakistanis

The Vietnamese

Cultural Differentiation

Acculturation

Other Southeast Asians

Ethnoviolence

The Model-Minority Stereotype

Assimilation

Sociological Analysis

The Functionalist View

The Conflict View

The Interactionist View

Retrospect

Chapter 9 Middle Eastern and North African Americans

Sociohistorical Perspective

The Push-Pull Factors

Structural Conditions

Societal Reaction

Arab Americans

Social Organization

Residential Patterning

Social Indicators

Fighting Stereotypes and Group Blame

Lebanese and Syrian Americans

Ethnic Identity

Migration and Settlement

Culture Conflicts

Early Patterns

Upward Mobility

The Contemporary Scene

Egyptian Americans

A Growing Wave of Immigration

Settlement and Acculturation

Iraqi Americans

Homeland Influence

The Contemporary Scene

Palestinian Americans

Homeland Influence

The American Federation of Ramallah

Community Life

Iranian Americans

Israeli Americans

Push-Pull Factors

Settlement Patterns

Adjustment and Identity

Turkish Americans

Factors Against Immigration

Societal Attitudes

Settlement Patterns

Assimilation

Sociological Analysis

The Functionalist View

The Conflict View

The Interactionist View

Retrospect

Chapter 10 Black Americans

Sociohistorical Perspective

The Years of Slavery

Racism and Its Legacy

Institutionalized Racism

Immigration and Jim Crow

Effects of Jim Crow

The South

The North

The Ku Klux Klan

The Winds of Change

Desegregation: The First Phase

Desegregation: The Second Phase

Urban Unrest

The 1960s Riots

The 1980s Miami Riots

The 1992 Los Angeles Riot

The Bell Curve Debate

Early IQ Tests

IQ Test Performance by Other Groups

Language as Prejudice

Social Indicators of Black Progress

Education

Income

Occupation

Housing

Redlining

Residential Segregation

Race or Class?

The Black Middle Class

The Black Poor

The Racial Divide

African and Afro-Caribbean Immigrants

Afro-Caribbean Americans

The Haitians

The Jamaicans

African-born Americans

Cape Verdean Americans

Nigerian Americans

Assimilation

Sociological Analysis

The Functionalist View

The Conflict View

The Interactionist View

Retrospect

Chapter 11 Hispanic Americans

Sociohistorical Perspective

Structural Conditions

Cultural Differentiation

The Cosmic Race

Machismo

Dignidad

Racial Attitudes

Other Cultural Attributes

Current Patterns

Social Indicators of Hispanic Progress

Education

Income

Occupation

Mexican Americans

Recruiting Mexicans

Expulsion

Violence

Urban Life

Stereotyping

Chicano Power

Current Patterns

Puerto Rican Americans

Early Relations

The Push-Pull Factors

The Family

Religion

Puerto Rican Communities

Socioeconomic Characteristics

Cuban Americans

Migration

Ethnic Communities

The Contemporary Scene

Cultural Values

Caribbean, Central, and South Americans

Dominican Americans

Salvadoran Americans

Nicaraguan Americans

Colombian Americans

Assimilation

Education

Family

Sociological Analysis

The Functionalist View

The Conflict View

The Interactionist View

Retrospect

Part IV Other Minorities

Chapter 12 Religious Minorities

Sociohistorical Perspective

Catholic Americans

Societal Hostility

Values and Practices

Religion

Education

The Contemporary Scene

Jewish Americans

Immigration Before 1880

Newcomers and Tension

Anti-Semitism

Upward Mobility

Social Interaction

Jewish Identity

Mormon Americans

The Early Years

Values and Practices

Family

Education

Religion

Economics

The Contemporary Scene

Muslim Americans

Values and Practices

Confronting Prejudice and Discrimination

Amish Americans

Values, Symbols, and Practices

Conflicts with Society

Rastafarian Americans

The Early Years in Jamaica

From Outcasts to Social Acceptance

Values, Symbols, and Practices

The Contemporary Scene

Santerian Americans

Values, Symbols, and Practices

Santeria in the United States

Hindu Americans

Values, Symbols, and Practices

Hinduism in the United States

Religion and U.S. Society

Civil Religion

Current Controversies

Assimilation

Sociological analysis

The Functionalist View

The Conflict View

The Interactionist View

Retrospect

Chapter 13 Women as a Minority Group

Sociohistorical Perspective

Restrictions on Women

The Suffrage Movement

The Women's Liberation Movement

The Reality of Gender Differences

Biological Explanations

Socialization and Gender Roles

Childhood Socialization

Advertising

Immigrant and Minority Women

Vestiges of White Ethnic Orientations

Today's Minority Women

Commonalities

Social Indicators of Women's Status

Education

Employment

Income

Sexual Harassment

Complaints and Actions

Sexism and the Law

Sociological Analysis

The Functionalist View

The Conflict View

The Interactionist View

Retrospect

Chapter 14 Gays, People with Disabilities, and the Elderly

Sexual Orientation

Sociohistorical Perspective

Gay Genetics

Homosexuality in the United States

Stigma and Sanctions

Tolerance and Backlash

How Many Gays Are There?

Public Attitudes About Homosexuality

Current Issues

Hate Crimes

Same-Sex Marriages

Gay Parenting

People with Disabilities

Sociohistorical Perspective

Americans with Disabilities

Legislative Actions

Rehabilitation Act of 1973

Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

Myths and Stereotypes

Current Issues

Old Age

Sociohistorical Perspective

The Graying of America

Growing Diversity of the Older Population

Demographic Factors

Values About Age

Myths and Stereotypes

Mental Capacities

Sexuality

Current Issues

Age Discrimination

Economic Security

Health Care

Immigrant Elderly

Sociological Analysis

The Functionalist View

Activity Theory

Disengagement Theory

The Conflict View

The Interactionist View

Retrospect

Part V Contemporary Patterns and Issues

Chapter 15 The Ever-Changing U.S. Mosaic

Ethnic Consciousness

Country of Origin as a Factor

The Three-Generation Hypothesis

The Changing Face of Ethnicity

Transnationalism

Social Capital

Segmented Assimilation

Naturalization

Ethnicity as a Social Process

Migration Patterns

Symbolic Ethnicity

Current Ethnic Issues

Immigration Fears

Jobs

Wages

Costs and Contributions

Public-Opinion Polls

Unauthorized Immigrants

Language Retention

Bilingual Education

The Official English Movement

Multiculturalism

Diversity in the Future

Social Indicators of Change

Interethnic Marriages

Interracial Marriages

Racial Identity

Religion and Migration

Beyond Tomorrow

Additional information

CIN0205119840G
9780205119844
0205119840
Strangers to these Shores, Census Update by Vincent N. Parrillo
Used - Good
Hardback
Pearson Education (US)
0
528
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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