This work ranks as one of the most significant analyses of urban Chicano political socialization to date. Unlike contemporaries who are either theoreticians or numbers crunchers, Jankowski undertakes a quantitative analysis that is theoretically based. Hypotheses developed from three theories are tested to ascertain which best explains the political assimilation of Chicano adolescents in San Antonio, Albuquerque, and Los Angeles. The theories compared are: the Wirth/Chicago School which argues that the length of urban residence promotes assimilation; the neighborhood solidarity model which proposes that upward socioeconomic mobility and neighborhood integration promote assimilation; and the Marxist theory which argues that the political-eco...
Felix M. Padilla\u27s contribution to the growing body of literature on Latino/Hispanic identity in ...
Latinos and the Political System, carefully compiled by F. Chris Garcia, represents a significant co...
This book by Charles Green and Basil Wilson is most informative. The authors, a sociologist and a po...
Aimed primarily at an audience of archaeologists, architects, historians, cultural geographers, and ...
This book is an unrevised third printing of eleven inspiring essays written by twelve social scienti...
Studies in Ethnicity is a collection of papers read at the conference Aspects of the East European ...
The editors of this book, associate professors at the University of Chicago, state that their work s...
The reader seeking fresh and intellectually stimulating material on American ethnic history will fin...
The forced removal of thousands of Indians from eastern Kansas between 1854 and 1871 adversely affec...
A number of geographers and historians have observed that an unusually diverse mix of people populat...
Felix M. Padilla\u27s Puerto Rican Chicago is a noteworthy contribution to the ever burgeoning liter...
The University of Chicago rose out of the marshes on the southside of Chicago in the 1890s to win re...
Hraba uses the social science disciplines--i.e., sociology, history, and psychology--to set the scop...
The article reviews the book Urban Outcasts: A Comparative Sociology of Advanced Marginality, by L...
Historians are typically satisfied with pinpointing dates and describing associated events while min...
Felix M. Padilla\u27s contribution to the growing body of literature on Latino/Hispanic identity in ...
Latinos and the Political System, carefully compiled by F. Chris Garcia, represents a significant co...
This book by Charles Green and Basil Wilson is most informative. The authors, a sociologist and a po...
Aimed primarily at an audience of archaeologists, architects, historians, cultural geographers, and ...
This book is an unrevised third printing of eleven inspiring essays written by twelve social scienti...
Studies in Ethnicity is a collection of papers read at the conference Aspects of the East European ...
The editors of this book, associate professors at the University of Chicago, state that their work s...
The reader seeking fresh and intellectually stimulating material on American ethnic history will fin...
The forced removal of thousands of Indians from eastern Kansas between 1854 and 1871 adversely affec...
A number of geographers and historians have observed that an unusually diverse mix of people populat...
Felix M. Padilla\u27s Puerto Rican Chicago is a noteworthy contribution to the ever burgeoning liter...
The University of Chicago rose out of the marshes on the southside of Chicago in the 1890s to win re...
Hraba uses the social science disciplines--i.e., sociology, history, and psychology--to set the scop...
The article reviews the book Urban Outcasts: A Comparative Sociology of Advanced Marginality, by L...
Historians are typically satisfied with pinpointing dates and describing associated events while min...
Felix M. Padilla\u27s contribution to the growing body of literature on Latino/Hispanic identity in ...
Latinos and the Political System, carefully compiled by F. Chris Garcia, represents a significant co...
This book by Charles Green and Basil Wilson is most informative. The authors, a sociologist and a po...