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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

Sociohistorical coverage of racial, ethnic, religious and other groups

This top-selling comprehensive text examines racial and ethnic relations in the U.S. from a sociohistorical perspective.

The book integrates the three main theoretical perspectives and the experiences of more than 50 racial, ethnic, religious, and other groups.

The Census Update program incorporates 2010 Census data into a course-simply and easily. The components of the Census Update Program include an updated census edition with all charts and graphs-to reflect the results of the 2010 Census. In addition, A Short Introduction to the U.S. Census is available and an updated MySocLab.

Teaching & Learning Experience

  • Personalize Learning -MySocLab delivers proven results in helping students succeed, provides engaging experiences that personalize learning, and comes from a trusted partner with educational expertise and a deep commitment to helping students and instructors achieve their goals.
  • Improve Critical Thinking - The book challenges students to think about socioeconomic indicators of minority groups and how they influence culture.
  • Engage Students - First-hand immigrant accounts and comparative examples help students experience diverse relations on a global scale.
  • Explore Theory - Covers all major theoretical perspectives.
  • Support Instructors - MySocLab enables instructors to assess student progress and adapt course material to meet the specific needs of the class.

Note: MySocLab does not come automatically packaged with this text. To purchase MySocLab, please visit: www.mysoclab.com or you can purchase a ValuePack of the text + MySocLab (at no additional cost). ValuePack ISBN-10: 0205172253 / ValuePack ISBN-13: 9780205172252

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

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

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

Additional information

CIN0205260233A
9780205260232
0205260233
Strangers to these Shores, Census Update by Vincent N. Parrillo
Used - Well Read
Hardback
Pearson Education (US)
20120109
528
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book. We do our best to provide good quality books for you to read, but there is no escaping the fact that it has been owned and read by someone else previously. Therefore it will show signs of wear and may be an ex library book

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