Wright R, Ellis M
Int J Popul Geogr. 2000 May-Jun;6(3):197-211. doi: 10.1002/1099-1220(200005/06)6:3<197::AID-IJPG183>3.0.CO;2-F.
Zelinsky and Lee recently unveiled a model of the sociospatial process of immigrant settlement designed to augment and possibly supplant the well-known theories of assimilation and pluralism. Although in some ways new, their work continues a tradition in social science that treats the settlement geography of immigrants as a measure of their more general fit into American society. The authors question the prevailing assumption that immigrant settlement patterns represent a barometer of their adaptation, or lack thereof, to a host society. This critique of the concepts of assimilation, pluralism and Zelinsky and Lee's alternative "heterolocal" model of immigrant settlement pivots around the issues of spatial scale and race. The authors argue that the contestations over immigration and how well immigrants fit into society are increasingly constructed at the regional scale. The authors also assert that questions race infuse almost all aspects of these debates. The transformation of America's largest city-regions into places of non-White immigrants, and the shifting political balance of power to states like California through immigration-driven reapportionment, are touchstones for anti-immigration initiatives and associated local and national debate. Fear of racial regional changes underpins an increasingly powerful response to immigration. The reactions elicited by these settlement geographies fall under the heading the authors call the "territorial politics of immigration".
泽林斯基和李最近公布了一个移民定居的社会空间过程模型,旨在扩充并可能取代著名的同化和多元主义理论。尽管在某些方面是新的,但他们的工作延续了社会科学中的一个传统,即将移民的定居地理视为他们融入美国社会程度的一种衡量标准。作者们质疑了一种普遍的假设,即移民定居模式代表了他们对东道国社会适应或不适应的晴雨表。这种对同化、多元主义概念以及泽林斯基和李提出的替代性“异质地方”移民定居模式的批判,围绕着空间尺度和种族问题展开。作者们认为,关于移民以及移民融入社会程度的争论越来越多地在区域尺度上构建起来。作者们还断言,种族问题几乎渗透到了这些辩论的各个方面。美国最大的城市区域转变为非白人移民聚居地,以及通过移民驱动的重新分配导致政治权力平衡向加利福尼亚等州转移,是反移民倡议以及相关地方和全国性辩论的试金石。对种族区域变化的恐惧支撑着对移民日益强烈的反应。这些定居地理引发的反应属于作者们所称的“移民的领土政治”范畴。