Youth Transitions among Descendants of Turkish Immigrants in Amsterdam and Strasbourg: [electronic resource] : A Generation in Transition / by Elif Keskiner.

By: Keskiner, Elif [author.]
Contributor(s): SpringerLink (Online service)
Material type: TextTextSeries: IMISCOE Research Series: Publisher: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2019Edition: 1st ed. 2019Description: X, 147 p. 5 illus. online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783030117900Subject(s): Emigration and immigration | Social groups | Family | Social structure | Social inequality | Educational sociology  | Education and sociology | Migration | Sociology of Family, Youth and Aging | Social Structure, Social Inequality | Sociology of EducationAdditional physical formats: Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification: 304.8 LOC classification: GN370HB1951-2577Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Chapter 1: Youth Transitions of Descendants of Turkish Migrant -- Chapter 2: Prolonged Transitions: Early Tracking and its Implications for Transitions -- Chapter 3: Blurring of the Transition Point: Combining Work and Study -- Chapter 4: Transitions Decisions: Intersections of Social class, Gender and Ethnicity -- Chapter 5: A Typology of Transition Trajectories -- Conclusion: Developing Forms of Capital in Youth Transitions. .
In: Springer Nature Open Access eBookSummary: This open access book maps the youth transitions of descendants of migrants from Turkey living in Amsterdam and Strasbourg, through a comparative mixed-methods research design. As such, it is of interest to discussions in youth sociology, social mobility and second-generation research. The book follows transition trajectories of the second-generation, from school to activity or inactivity in the labour market, to marriage or further study and, deepens our understanding of transitions by unravelling the macro and micro mechanisms behind individual pathways. On the one hand, the author reveals the ongoing significance of distinct macro institutional settings as well as social structures such as social class, ethnicity and gender in shaping the youth transition experience. On the other, she shows that youth transitions are not predestined to social reproduction when institutional and social structures create conditions for the development of resources necessary for social mobility. Therefore, through an examination of how immigrants’ descendants develop forms of capital in their social trajectories, in relation to institutional and social structures, the book advances the theoretical discussion on Bourdieu’s capital theory. Moreover, in times when native-born descendants of immigrants are at the forefront of public debate being subjected to normative integration demands, the book significantly shifts the lens and draws our attention to the daily challenges and realities faced by ethnic minority youth.
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Chapter 1: Youth Transitions of Descendants of Turkish Migrant -- Chapter 2: Prolonged Transitions: Early Tracking and its Implications for Transitions -- Chapter 3: Blurring of the Transition Point: Combining Work and Study -- Chapter 4: Transitions Decisions: Intersections of Social class, Gender and Ethnicity -- Chapter 5: A Typology of Transition Trajectories -- Conclusion: Developing Forms of Capital in Youth Transitions. .

Open Access

This open access book maps the youth transitions of descendants of migrants from Turkey living in Amsterdam and Strasbourg, through a comparative mixed-methods research design. As such, it is of interest to discussions in youth sociology, social mobility and second-generation research. The book follows transition trajectories of the second-generation, from school to activity or inactivity in the labour market, to marriage or further study and, deepens our understanding of transitions by unravelling the macro and micro mechanisms behind individual pathways. On the one hand, the author reveals the ongoing significance of distinct macro institutional settings as well as social structures such as social class, ethnicity and gender in shaping the youth transition experience. On the other, she shows that youth transitions are not predestined to social reproduction when institutional and social structures create conditions for the development of resources necessary for social mobility. Therefore, through an examination of how immigrants’ descendants develop forms of capital in their social trajectories, in relation to institutional and social structures, the book advances the theoretical discussion on Bourdieu’s capital theory. Moreover, in times when native-born descendants of immigrants are at the forefront of public debate being subjected to normative integration demands, the book significantly shifts the lens and draws our attention to the daily challenges and realities faced by ethnic minority youth.

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