2017
DOI: 10.1002/ijop.12432
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Variants of biculturalism in migrant and host adolescents living in Italy and Spain: Testing the importance of life domains through the Relative Acculturation Extended Model

Abstract: Several variants of biculturalism have recently been proposed (Schwartz, Birman, Benet-Martínez, & Unger, 2016). Nevertheless, few studies have identified different types of bicultural individuals, and no one has addressed the possibility that these types could depend on acculturation domains. By using the Relative Acculturation Extended Model (RAEM), this study aimed to explore if different variants of biculturalism could be individuated, and if some of these variants were sensitive to life domains. Four samp… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…In line with the literature on acculturation models for domains (Arends-Tóth & Van de Vijver, 2003) applied to the RAEM model by Mancini and Bottura (2014) and Mancini, Navas Luque, López-Rodríguez, and Bottura (2018), the domain-specific strategies and the acculturation attitudes of dyads were presented by aggregating them into peripheral (work, economic, social) and central domains (family, religious beliefs and customs, and ways of thinking, principles and values). In Table 2, we report the mean scores of Italian and immigrant dyads and the significant differences between them.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In line with the literature on acculturation models for domains (Arends-Tóth & Van de Vijver, 2003) applied to the RAEM model by Mancini and Bottura (2014) and Mancini, Navas Luque, López-Rodríguez, and Bottura (2018), the domain-specific strategies and the acculturation attitudes of dyads were presented by aggregating them into peripheral (work, economic, social) and central domains (family, religious beliefs and customs, and ways of thinking, principles and values). In Table 2, we report the mean scores of Italian and immigrant dyads and the significant differences between them.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Namely, previous research on immigrant integration could be criticized for over-reliance on sample homogeneity: most studies have assumed that patterns at the level of the sample apply to all (or most) participants (for research examples, see Sam & Berry, 2016). Acculturation psychological research has increasingly started to acknowledge the value of a person-oriented approach and complemented the predominantly variable-oriented literature by examining the variety of profiles among different immigrant subgroups (Bámaca-Colbert & Gayles, 2010;Grigoryev & van de Vijver, 2018;Haugen & Kunst, 2017;Inguglia & Musso, 2015;Kruusvall et al, 2009;Maehler et al, 2019;Mancini, Navas, López-Rodríguez, & Bottura, 2018).…”
Section: Aim and Research Questionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent developments of the acculturation literature (e.g., Bourhis, Montaruli, El‐Geledi, Harvey, & Barrette, 2010; Mancini, Navas, López‐Rodríguez, & Bottura, 2018; Navas et al., 2005) have highlighted the importance of adopting intergroup perspectives that consider the interplay between the experiences of migrant adolescents and their non‐migrant peers. Notably, intergroup perspectives consider both (a) the acculturation orientations adopted by adolescents from migrant families and (b) the acculturation orientations (or preferences) adopted by destination‐society individuals toward individuals from migrant families.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In line with these theoretical advancements, the Relative Acculturation Extended Model (Navas et al., 2005) has integrated prior theoretical contributions by considering the perspectives of both natives and migrant‐descent individuals. Notably, this model differentiates between acculturation orientations put into practice, and acculturation preferences of individuals from both migrant and native groups and argues that people can display different acculturation orientations and preferences across different life domains (Mancini & Bottura, 2014; Mancini et al., 2018; Navas et al., 2005). A prime example is the delineation between “public” (e.g., in schools or workplaces) and “private” (e.g., in family settings) acculturation (Arends‐Tóth & van de Vijver, 2008).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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