Institut national d'études démographiques (INED), Paris, France.
Demography. 2018 Aug;55(4):1507-1545. doi: 10.1007/s13524-018-0689-0.
Building on emerging research into intergenerational contextual mobility, I use longitudinal data from France (1990-2008) to investigate the extent to which second-generation immigrants and the French majority continue to live in similar neighborhood environments during childhood and adulthood. To explore the persistence of ethnoracial segregation and spatial disadvantage, I draw on two measures of neighborhood composition: the immigrant share and the unemployment rate. The analysis explores the individual and contextual factors underpinning intergenerational contextual mobility and variation across immigrant-origin groups. The results document a strong stability of neighborhood environments from childhood to adulthood, especially with regard to the ethnoracial composition of the neighborhood. Individual-level factors are quite weak in accounting for these patterns compared with the characteristics of the city of origin. Moreover, the degree of contextual mobility between childhood and adulthood varies across groups. I find that neighborhood environments are more stable over time for non-European second-generation immigrants. The findings offer important new empirical contributions to the French literature on the residential segregation of immigrants and will more broadly be of interest to scholars of intergenerational spatial and social mobility.
基于新兴的代际背景下的社会流动性研究,我利用法国(1990-2008 年)的纵向数据,研究了第二代移民和法国多数群体在儿童期和成年期是否继续生活在类似的邻里环境中。为了探索族裔隔离和空间劣势的持续存在,我借鉴了邻里构成的两个衡量标准:移民比例和失业率。分析探讨了代际背景下社会流动性和移民原籍群体之间差异的个体和背景因素。研究结果记录了从儿童期到成年期邻里环境的强烈稳定性,尤其是邻里的族裔构成。与原籍城市的特征相比,个体层面的因素在解释这些模式方面非常薄弱。此外,儿童期和成年期之间的背景流动性程度因群体而异。我发现,对于非欧洲的第二代移民来说,邻里环境随着时间的推移更加稳定。这些发现为法国移民居住隔离方面的文献提供了重要的新经验贡献,并且更广泛地引起了代际空间和社会流动性学者的兴趣。