Logo du site
  • English
  • Français
  • Se connecter
Logo du site
  • English
  • Français
  • Se connecter
  1. Accueil
  2. Université de Neuchâtel
  3. Publications
  4. Where and Why Immigrants Intend to Naturalize: The Interplay Between Acculturation Strategies and Integration Policies
 
  • Details
Options
Vignette d'image

Where and Why Immigrants Intend to Naturalize: The Interplay Between Acculturation Strategies and Integration Policies

Auteur(s)
Politi, Emanuele
Bennour, Salomon 
Institut forum suisse des migrations 
Lüders, Adrian
Manatschal, Anita 
Institut forum suisse des migrations 
Green, Eva G.T.
Date de parution
2021-8-14
In
Political Psychology
Vol.
3
No
43
De la page
437
A la page
455
Revu par les pairs
1
Résumé
Via naturalization procedures, immigrants have the opportunity to acquire rights and duties limited to nationals. Yet little is known about acculturative contexts and naturalization motives underlying immigrants' naturalization intentions. Employing a large sample of first-generation immigrants in Switzerland (N = 3928) and a multilevel approach, we articulated individual acculturation strategies and cantonal integration policies to explain naturalization intentions and underlying motives. Results at the individual level showed that assimilated immigrants report the highest intentions to naturalize, followed by integrated, and lastly by separated immigrants. Motives underlying naturalization intentions also differed as a function of acculturation strategies. Whereas integrated and assimilated immigrants reported higher symbolic motives than separated immigrants, the latter reported the highest level of instrumental motives. A cross-level interaction qualified results at the individual level. Indeed, the gap between integrated and separated immigrants was more pronounced under inclusive integration policies. Accordingly, integrated immigrants' naturalization intentions increased the more integration policies were inclusive, whereas this was not the case among assimilated and separated immigrants. Overall, our findings cast a positive light on inclusive integration policies as contextual affordances to overcome barriers to naturalization and encourage migration scholars to consider the broader political context in which immigrant acculturation is embedded.
Lié au projet
Societal Norms as Predictors of Behavior and Attitudes regarding Migration among National Majorities and Immigrants (IP31) 
Identifiants
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/123456789/29552
_
10.1111/pops.12771
Type de publication
journal article
Dossier(s) à télécharger
 main article: 2021-10-08_2715_7343.pdf (259.11 KB)
google-scholar
Présentation du portailGuide d'utilisationStratégie Open AccessDirective Open Access La recherche à l'UniNE Open Access ORCIDNouveautés

Service information scientifique & bibliothèques
Rue Emile-Argand 11
2000 Neuchâtel
contact.libra@unine.ch

Propulsé par DSpace, DSpace-CRIS & 4Science | v2022.02.00