In a context of widening inequality and governmental persecution of undocumented immigrants, central questions concern the social mobility of new ethnic groups formed as a result of mass migration from Latin America and Asia—especially the growing number of children of immigrants now transitioning to adulthood. This article presents findings from merged samples of two research studies in Southern California, the Children of Immigrants Longitudinal Study (CILS-III) and Immigration and Intergenerational Mobility in Metropolitan Los Angeles (IIMMLA). The focus is on the educational mobility of foreign-parentage (1.5- and second-generation) young adults of Mexican, Salvadoran
This twenty-three month ethnographic study seeks to understand how citizenship status impacts the ev...
Almost 30 percent of the more than 68 million young adults aged eighteen to thirty-four in the Unite...
This twenty-three month ethnographic study seeks to understand how citizenship status impacts the ev...
IIMMLA was supported by the Russell Sage Foundation. Since 1991, the Russell Sage Foundation has fun...
IIMMLA was supported by the Russell Sage Foundation. Since 1991, the Russell Sage Foundation has fun...
This chapter provides an overview of the intergenerational progress of several major immigrant group...
A new generation of Americans, raised in immigrant families, has been coming of age. They are transf...
This report summarizes the latest results of the Children of Immigrants Longitudinal Study (CILS), a...
This study examines Hispanic geographic mobility in the context of the socioeconomic life cycle. It ...
In a nation of immigrants Los Angeles is increasingly a city of new immigrants. As of 1980,which...
In a nation of immigrants Los Angeles is increasingly a city of new immigrants. As of 1980,which...
This article reviews evidence on intergenerational social mobility in Latin America. Results indicat...
Within the United States, nearly all growth in the young adult population over the next forty years ...
No state has felt the impact of the new immigration more than California, and no institution more th...
Children of Immigrants Longitudinal Study (CILS) was designed to study the adaptation process of the...
This twenty-three month ethnographic study seeks to understand how citizenship status impacts the ev...
Almost 30 percent of the more than 68 million young adults aged eighteen to thirty-four in the Unite...
This twenty-three month ethnographic study seeks to understand how citizenship status impacts the ev...
IIMMLA was supported by the Russell Sage Foundation. Since 1991, the Russell Sage Foundation has fun...
IIMMLA was supported by the Russell Sage Foundation. Since 1991, the Russell Sage Foundation has fun...
This chapter provides an overview of the intergenerational progress of several major immigrant group...
A new generation of Americans, raised in immigrant families, has been coming of age. They are transf...
This report summarizes the latest results of the Children of Immigrants Longitudinal Study (CILS), a...
This study examines Hispanic geographic mobility in the context of the socioeconomic life cycle. It ...
In a nation of immigrants Los Angeles is increasingly a city of new immigrants. As of 1980,which...
In a nation of immigrants Los Angeles is increasingly a city of new immigrants. As of 1980,which...
This article reviews evidence on intergenerational social mobility in Latin America. Results indicat...
Within the United States, nearly all growth in the young adult population over the next forty years ...
No state has felt the impact of the new immigration more than California, and no institution more th...
Children of Immigrants Longitudinal Study (CILS) was designed to study the adaptation process of the...
This twenty-three month ethnographic study seeks to understand how citizenship status impacts the ev...
Almost 30 percent of the more than 68 million young adults aged eighteen to thirty-four in the Unite...
This twenty-three month ethnographic study seeks to understand how citizenship status impacts the ev...