Race, Gender, and Class in the Persistence of the Mariel Stigma Twenty Years after the Exodus from Cuba
2007; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 41; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1111/j.1747-7379.2007.00087.x
ISSN1747-7379
Autores Tópico(s)Diaspora, migration, transnational identity
ResumoThe study examines the mediating effects of gender, race, and class in the Mariel Cuban immigrant adaptation process. It explores the significance of the Mariel identity by comparing the experiences of pre-1980 arrivals with those of the Mariel cohort (1980–1981) and post-Mariel arrivals (1982–1990, 1990–2000). The central question of the study is the extent to which the Marielitos' experience as a group with stigmatization and being labeled as “different” and pathological has persisted in having a different effect on their adaptation to the U.S. from that of other Cuban arrivals before and after Mariel. This study bases its definition of stigma on sociologically grounded theoretical orientation of the construction of a social identity in which a dominant group(s) attribute an undesired difference from what was anticipated to an out-group such that it leads to varieties of discrimination that reduce one's life chances.
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