1999
DOI: 10.1353/jaas.1999.0009
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Building Ethnoburbia: The Emergence and Manifestation of the Chinese Ethnoburb in Los Angeles' San Gabriel Valley

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Cited by 68 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…Fully aware the historical and contemporary negative connotations attached to Chinatowns, community leaders and residents in suburban areas do not want outsiders labeling their communities be labeled as new/suburban Chinatown (Li, 1999). In the study on Flushing Queens, Chen (1992) demonstrates important characteristics in Flushing that differ it from Chinatown by naming his book ''Chinatown No More.''…”
Section: Revisiting the Chinatown Debatementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fully aware the historical and contemporary negative connotations attached to Chinatowns, community leaders and residents in suburban areas do not want outsiders labeling their communities be labeled as new/suburban Chinatown (Li, 1999). In the study on Flushing Queens, Chen (1992) demonstrates important characteristics in Flushing that differ it from Chinatown by naming his book ''Chinatown No More.''…”
Section: Revisiting the Chinatown Debatementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hidden away, beyond the surface of the "boxes" seen in the distance from the freeway, are manicured lawns, broadly paved streets, and cars upon cars -all characteristic of suburban 16 Wei Li (1999), who has written several articles on the City, operationalized a theory for ethnic suburban enclaves, arguing that the ethnoburb framework "illuminates the complex coalescence of global and local, economic and political, individual and institutional, urban and suburban forces that led to the intricacies of negotiating life and future prospects for this multiethnic suburban place" (3-4). 17 For a discussion on the political emergence of Monterrey Park as the first "suburban Chinatown," see Fong 1994.…”
Section: Middleclassness and Invisibility In Suburban Daly Citymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, in Los Angeles the very-low-income Chinese concentration in historic Chinatown and the large Chinese concentration or "ethnoburb" in the moderately priced suburb of Monterey Park are well known (Li, 1999), but there also are more affluent Chinese concentrations in the East San Gabriel Valley and in Cerritos.…”
Section: Contrary Indications Of Residential Concentrations Outside Pmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, in Chicago as of 1910, neighborhoods known as either German or Czech were less than a third German or Czech, and in the eleven "Little Italies" a majority of residents were not Italian (Philpott, 1978). In the Los Angeles area less than half the residents in the well-known suburban Chinatown of the Monterey Park area were Chinese in 1990 (Li, 1999); and in 2000 only about 20% of the residents of the enclave of Koreatown were ethnic Korean, even though the Koreatown concentration was extremely important to Southern California's Koreans (Allen and Turner, 2002). Therefore, recognized and important ethnic concentrations do not necessarily contain extremely high percentages or even majorities of the ethnic group.…”
Section: Defining Residential Concentrationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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