Intergenerational Social Mobility Among the Children of Immigrants in Western Europe: Between Socioeconomic Assimilation and Disadvantage

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Abstract

Are Western European countries successfully incorporating their immigrant populations? We approach immigrant incorporation as a process of intergenerational social mobility and argue that mobility trajectories are uniquely suited to gauge the influence of immigrant origins on life chances. We compare trajectories of absolute intergenerational mobility among second generation and native populations using nationally representative data in seven European countries and report two major findings. First, we document a master trend of native-immigrant similarity in mobility trajectories, suggesting that the destiny of the second generation - like that of their native counterpart - is primarily determined by parental social class rather than immigrant background per se. Secondly, disaggregating results by regional origins reveals heterogeneous mobility outcomes. On one hand, certain origin groups are at heightened risks of stagnation in the service class when originating from there and face some disadvantage in attaining the top social class in adulthood when originating from lower classes. On the other hand, we observe a pattern of second-generation advantage, whereby certain origin groups are more likely to experience some degree of upward mobility. Altogether, these results suggest that immigrant origins per se do not strongly constrain the socioeconomic destiny of the second generation in Western Europe.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)489-516
Number of pages28
JournalSociological Science
Volume11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 3 Jun 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). This open-access article has been published under a Creative Commons Attribution License, which allows unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction, in any form, as long as the original author and source have been credited.

Funding

Both authors contributed equally to this article. We wish to thank Filiz Garip, Ineke Maas, Ben Rosche, Frank van Tubergen, Linda Zhao as well as audiences at the \u201CMigration and Inequality\u201D ECSR thematic workshop in Milan, the ECSR annual meeting in Lausanne, and the Migration and Social Stratification seminar at Utrecht University for helpful comments and criticisms on earlier versions of our article. Bucca gratefully acknowledges financial support from FONDECYT, Chile Iniciaci\u00F3n grant project No. 11221171 and ANID Milenio Labor Market Mismatch - Causes and Consequences, LM2C2 (NCS2022-045). Direct correspondence to Lucas Drouhot, [email protected].

FundersFunder number
European Consortium for Sociological Research
Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y TecnológicoNCS2022-045, 11221171

    Keywords

    • Assimilation
    • Europe
    • Immigration
    • Second generation
    • Social mobility
    • Social stratification

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