Journal Article10.1111/J.1464-0597.1997.TB01087.X
Immigration, Acculturation, and Adaptation
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TL;DR: In this paper, a conceptual framework for cross-cultural psychology has been proposed, and some general findings and conclusions based on a sample of empirical studies have been presented, with a consideration of the social and psychological costs and benefits of adopting a pluralist and integrationist orientation to these issues.
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Abstract: La psychologie interculturelle a montre qu'il existait des rapports etroits entre le contexte culturel et le developpement comportemental de l'individu. Cette relation etablie, l'effort des recherches interculturelles a de plus en plus porte sur ce qu'il advenait des individus quand ils tentaient de refaire leur vie dans une culture differente de leur culture d'origine. Les consequences psychologiques a long terme de ce processus d'acculturation sont tres variables, dependant de variables sociales et personnelles qui renvoient a la societe de depart, a la societe d'accueil et a des phenomenes qui existent avant, mais qui emergent pendant la periode d'acculturation. Cet article esquisse un schema conceptuel a partir duquel acculturation et adaptation peuvent ětre etudiees, puis presente quelques conclusions et resultats generaux tires d'un echantillon de travaux empiriques. On envisage des applications possibles a la politique et aux programmes d'insertion en prenant en consideration les couts et les benefices sociaux et psychologiques emanant de l'adoprion d'une orientation pluraliste et integrationniste.
Cross-cultural psychology has demonstrated important links between cultural context and individual behavioural development. Given this relationship, cross-cultural research has increasingly investigated what happens to individuals who have developed in one cultural context when they attempt to re-establish their lives in another one. The long-term psychological consequences of this process of acculturation are highly variable, depending on social and personal variables that reside in the society of origin, the society of settlement. and phenomena that both exist prior to, and arise during, the course of acculturation. This article outlines a conceptual framework within which acculturation and adaptation can be investigated, and then presents some general findings and conclusions based on a sample of empirical studies. Applications to public policy and programmes are proposed. along with a consideration of the social and psychological costs and benefits of adopting a pluralist and integrationist orientation to these issues.
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Citations
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TL;DR: This paper examined the structural conditions that shape ethnic boundary making in the school setting and found that minority students in schools with identical ethnic compositions show different inclinations to identify as a majority group member and to form friendships with majority peers depending on the local extent of ethnic stratification across schools.
Cultural stress among international students at an australian university
Garry Thomson,Doreen Rosenthal +1 more
- 01 Jan 2006
TL;DR: The authors found that most international students reported at least some degree of cultural stress especially for items relating to family and a familiar way of life, while issues of discrimination, discomfort and feelings of lack of safety were less commonly reported as stressful.
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Tourists' strategies: An acculturation approach
TL;DR: The authors examined the applicability of Berry's (1997) bidimensional acculturation model to a sample of 668 recent and prospective international travelers from China, Germany, and the United States.
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Language Learning and Acculturation: Lessons From High School and Gap‐Year Exchange Students
TL;DR: This paper investigated the relationship between acculturation and language learning during a year-long study abroad program at the pre-collegiate level and found that higher levels of acculturative are associated with higher level of proficiency, while a rejection of the host culture is associated with lower levels of proficiency.
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TL;DR: Assimilation, acculturation, alternation, multicultural, and fusion models that have been used to describe the psychological processes, social experiences, and individual challenges and obstacles of being bicultural are reviewed and summarized for their contributions and implications for investigations of the psychological impact of biculturalism.
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