Immigrant youth: Acculturation, identity, and adaptation

被引:1328
作者
Berry, John W. [1 ]
Phinney, Jean S.
Sam, David L.
Vedder, Paul
机构
[1] Queens Univ, Kingston, ON, Canada
[2] Calif State Univ Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90032 USA
[3] Univ Bergen, Bergen, Norway
[4] Leiden Univ, Leiden, Netherlands
来源
APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY-AN INTERNATIONAL REVIEW-PSYCHOLOGIE APPLIQUEE-REVUE INTERNATIONALE | 2006年 / 55卷 / 03期
关键词
D O I
10.1111/j.1464-0597.2006.00256.x
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
This paper reports some of the main findings from a large international study of the acculturation and adaptation of immigrant youth (aged 13 to 18 years) who are settled in 13 societies (N = 5,366), as well as a sample of national youth (N = 2,631). The study was guided by three core questions: How do immigrant youth deal with the process of acculturation? How well do they adapt? Are there important relationships between how they acculturate and how well they adapt? Cluster analysis produced four distinct acculturation profiles: integration, ethnic, national, and diffuse. Factor analysis of five adaptation variables revealed two distinct forms of adaptation: psychological and sociocultural. There were substantial relationships between how youth acculturate and how well they adapt: those with an integration profile had the best psychological and sociocultural adaptation outcomes, while those with a diffuse profile had the worst; in between, those with an ethnic profile had moderately good psychological adaptation but poorer sociocultural adaptation, while those with a national profile had moderately poor psychological adaptation, and slightly negative sociocultural adaptation. This pattern of results was largely replicated using structural equation modeling. Implications for the settlement of immigrant youth are clear: youth should be encouraged to retain both a sense of their own heritage cultural identity, while establishing close ties with the larger national society.
引用
收藏
页码:303 / 332
页数:30
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