Immigrants acculturation in occidental countries
Summary :
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Berry's theory on the processes of acculturation
- Adaptation and assimilation
- Berry's model and the facts regarding the acculturation group
- Current state of the theoretical framework
- Updating Berry's theory
- Ideologies introduced by Bourhis
- Preference for integration
- Srategies of acculturation and acculturatif stress
- The acculturative stress
- The admission rate in psychiatric hospital in the USA and Murphy's observations
- The psychosomatic problems in migrants from Germany and Latin America
- Costs and advantages for the host society
- The formation of ghettos in urban centres
- Conclusion
- Links
- Books
- Internet
Abstract
John Berry, a Canadian social psychologist, has developed a theoretical framework about the psychological concept of acculturation. Two main acculturation processes exist in Cross Cultural Psychology: integration and assimilation. Berry argues that not only integration was the mode of acculturation chosen by migrants. But according to Berry, assimilation has not succeeded in the world and if one society tries to apply it, it will cause a strong resistance and a social conflict.
The current migrants, in contrary of those of the beginning of the XXth century, do not come with qualifications which improve the economy and the culture of the host country. The "cultural distance" makes them come with different values and behaviors, and sometimes they come with "not-compatible cultures". In order not to find these migrants in Lumpenproletariat (which can create important social risks), society has to assimilate those who are recognized as assimilable, and has to prevent the immigration of the others.
Is integration more favorable than the other acculturation processes ? Which is Berry's point of view about this subject ? On which empirical data can we rely on ?
I will present a summary of the Berry's theory, including what has been said in "Cross-cultural psychology : Research and applications" . I will analyse the advantages and disadvantages of acculturation processes, given the mental health of migrants and by presenting the case for the host countries
The current migrants, in contrary of those of the beginning of the XXth century, do not come with qualifications which improve the economy and the culture of the host country. The "cultural distance" makes them come with different values and behaviors, and sometimes they come with "not-compatible cultures". In order not to find these migrants in Lumpenproletariat (which can create important social risks), society has to assimilate those who are recognized as assimilable, and has to prevent the immigration of the others.
Is integration more favorable than the other acculturation processes ? Which is Berry's point of view about this subject ? On which empirical data can we rely on ?
I will present a summary of the Berry's theory, including what has been said in "Cross-cultural psychology : Research and applications" . I will analyse the advantages and disadvantages of acculturation processes, given the mental health of migrants and by presenting the case for the host countries
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