Graduate School of Media and Governance, Keio University, Kanagawa, Japan.
Demography. 2024 Jun 1;61(3):849-878. doi: 10.1215/00703370-11370115.
The impact of immigrant parents' premigration family background on their second-generation children residing in destination countries remains underexplored in the literature on historical social mobility. Using multigenerational historical survey records from the Japanese American Research Project, this study investigates the influence of premigration socioeconomic and cultural background of Japan-born grandparents and parents on the social mobility of second-generation Japanese Americans born in the continental United States in the early twentieth century. The analysis reveals the enduring effects of family premigration socioeconomic status, as indicated by occupation and education, and culture conducive to upward mobility, proxied by samurai ancestry, on second-generation Japanese Americans' educational and income levels. These effects may extend back to their nonmigrant grandparents and possibly contrast with their European second-generation immigrant counterparts, who typically experienced upward mobility regardless of their family background. The results point to the critical role of origin-country socioeconomic status and culture in immigrant social mobility research, particularly for populations whose negative reception has hindered their resource access in their new countries.
移民父母的移民前家庭背景对其居住在目的地国家的第二代子女的影响在历史社会流动的文献中仍未得到充分探讨。本研究利用美籍日本人研究项目的多代历史调查记录,调查了日本出生的祖父母和父母的移民前社会经济和文化背景对 20 世纪初出生于美国大陆的第二代日裔美国人的社会流动性的影响。分析结果表明,家庭移民前的社会经济地位(以职业和教育水平来衡量)和有利于向上流动的文化(以武士血统来表示)对第二代日裔美国人的教育和收入水平有着持久的影响。这些影响可能可以追溯到他们的非移民祖父母身上,并且可能与他们的欧洲第二代移民同龄人形成对比,后者通常无论家庭背景如何都经历了向上流动。研究结果表明,原籍国的社会经济地位和文化在移民社会流动研究中起着关键作用,特别是对于那些因其负面形象而阻碍了他们在新国家获取资源的人群而言。