Book review of Philip Kasinitz, John H. Mollenkopf, Mary C. Waters and Jennifer Holdaway, Inheriting the City: The Children of Immigrants Come of Age. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2008. $49.95 hardcove
Anthropology, arguably the most American of the social sciences, is also the most poignant. In Decli...
In this present issue of JMER, Marcela Ossa Parra is reviewing a book by Upegui-Hernández titled Gro...
Book review of Lynellyn D. Long and Ellen Oxfeld (Eds.), Coming Home? Refugees, Migrants and Those W...
In three decades the immigrant population in the U.S. has increased from 10 million to more than 28 ...
Book review of Managing to Make it: Urban Famlies and Adolescent Success. Frank Furstenberg Jr., Tho...
Co-authored by two distinguished sociologists, this book is a valuable synthesis of scholarship on r...
All disciplines dealing with immigrants and their children in the continental United States since 17...
Book review of Delbert S. Elliot, Scott Menard, Bruce Rankin, Amanda Elliot, William Julius Wilson a...
Book review of David J. Harding. Living the Drama: Community, Conflict, and Culture among Inner-City...
Immigration Reconsidered presents the latest paradigm of immigration studies from some of the leadin...
Children of Immigration is a highly readable and welcome addition to the study of contemporary immig...
Norma K. Phillips and Shulamith L.A. Straussner, Children in the Urban Environment: Linking Social P...
This book is an unrevised third printing of eleven inspiring essays written by twelve social scienti...
Most of the recent books on the children of immigrants, whether they focus on new arrivals (Learning...
Book review of Pallassana, R. Balgopal (Ed.). Social Work Practice with Immigrants and Refugees. New...
Anthropology, arguably the most American of the social sciences, is also the most poignant. In Decli...
In this present issue of JMER, Marcela Ossa Parra is reviewing a book by Upegui-Hernández titled Gro...
Book review of Lynellyn D. Long and Ellen Oxfeld (Eds.), Coming Home? Refugees, Migrants and Those W...
In three decades the immigrant population in the U.S. has increased from 10 million to more than 28 ...
Book review of Managing to Make it: Urban Famlies and Adolescent Success. Frank Furstenberg Jr., Tho...
Co-authored by two distinguished sociologists, this book is a valuable synthesis of scholarship on r...
All disciplines dealing with immigrants and their children in the continental United States since 17...
Book review of Delbert S. Elliot, Scott Menard, Bruce Rankin, Amanda Elliot, William Julius Wilson a...
Book review of David J. Harding. Living the Drama: Community, Conflict, and Culture among Inner-City...
Immigration Reconsidered presents the latest paradigm of immigration studies from some of the leadin...
Children of Immigration is a highly readable and welcome addition to the study of contemporary immig...
Norma K. Phillips and Shulamith L.A. Straussner, Children in the Urban Environment: Linking Social P...
This book is an unrevised third printing of eleven inspiring essays written by twelve social scienti...
Most of the recent books on the children of immigrants, whether they focus on new arrivals (Learning...
Book review of Pallassana, R. Balgopal (Ed.). Social Work Practice with Immigrants and Refugees. New...
Anthropology, arguably the most American of the social sciences, is also the most poignant. In Decli...
In this present issue of JMER, Marcela Ossa Parra is reviewing a book by Upegui-Hernández titled Gro...
Book review of Lynellyn D. Long and Ellen Oxfeld (Eds.), Coming Home? Refugees, Migrants and Those W...