2020
DOI: 10.1177/1477971419898491
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Beyond literacy and language provision: Socio-political participation of migrants and large language minorities in five countries from PIAAC R1/R2

Abstract: Integration is more than work and school: It consists of socio-political participation as well. Even without citizen’s rights, migrants have an opinion on whether they ‘have a say’ in the host or dominant society. This expression – having a say – is emblematic, because it is a well-known survey question, also used in the Program for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies (PIAAC). For this article, the authors choose Austria, Canada, Germany, Israel and the USA to analyse variables on political effi… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…As to language minorities, research is scarce. According to a study from five different OECD countries (the USA, Canada, Germany, Austria and Israel), language minorities have lower political efficacy than majorities, and, unlike for the difference between immigrants and the majority, literacy skills do not explain the difference (Grotlüschen et al, 2021). Moreover, language and ethnolinguistic identity need to be considered when studying language minorities.…”
Section: Political Self-efficacy Development Among Minoritiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As to language minorities, research is scarce. According to a study from five different OECD countries (the USA, Canada, Germany, Austria and Israel), language minorities have lower political efficacy than majorities, and, unlike for the difference between immigrants and the majority, literacy skills do not explain the difference (Grotlüschen et al, 2021). Moreover, language and ethnolinguistic identity need to be considered when studying language minorities.…”
Section: Political Self-efficacy Development Among Minoritiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The only noteworthy difference is that peer and parental norms are more critical for postmigrant youth in determining the degree of political engagement (Jugert et al, 2013), which can be seen as a manifestation of their families' social capital. Overall, social capital with different conceptualizations such as ethnic-civic community, social network, recruitment, and volunteering (de Rooij, 2012; Jacobs & Tillie, 2004) seems to be the driving force for postmigrants' political participation even today (see Giugni & Grasso, 2020;Grotlüschen et al, 2021).…”
Section: -Politics Of Depoliticization Or: Why Postmigrants (Dis)engage?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We also note as a limitation that immigrant groups were excluded from the current crossnational study, because of the well-known rampant variability in the number and social, educational, and demographic characteristics of respective populations in different countries (e.g., immigrants only account for 0.02% of the Japanese PIAAC sample, while immigrants and individuals with home language other than one of official languages constitute 29% of the Canadian sample) [93][94][95][96]. We believe that a cross-national comparison of literacy skills among immigrants is an important topic to pursue in future research.…”
Section: Plos Onementioning
confidence: 99%