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Dive into the research topics where Richard Alba is active.

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Featured researches published by Richard Alba.


International Migration Review | 2008

Immigrant Religion in the U.S. and Western Europe: Bridge or Barrier to Inclusion?

Richard Alba

This article analyzes why immigrant religion is viewed as a problematic area in Western Europe in contrast to the United States, where it is seen as facilitating the adaptation process. The difference, it is argued, is anchored in whether or not religion can play a major role for immigrants and the second generation as a bridge to inclusion in the new society. Three factors are critical: the religious backgrounds of immigrants in Western Europe and the United States; the religiosity of the native population; and historically rooted relations and arrangements between the state and religious groups.


International Migration Review | 1992

Assimilation and stratification in the homeownership patterns of racial and ethnic groups.

Richard Alba; John R. Logan

This study investigates homeownership differences among twelve racial/ethnic groups using the Public Use Sample data (PUMS) of the 1980 census. The analysis draws inspiration from two broad approaches in the literature on spatial processes—one approach is labeled as “assimilation” and the other as “stratification”—and includes both individual-level and contextual determinants. The study identifies a number of differences among non-Hispanic whites, blacks, American Indians, and Asian and Hispanic groups in access to homeownership. Majority group members have the greatest probability of homeownership, net of compositional characteristics. They also are the most likely to be able to respond to the housing needs of married persons and households with children by buying a home, and they have one of the smallest disparities in ownership between persons of low and high income. Homeownership opportunities in the suburban portions of metropolitan areas have their greatest impact on majority group members, while minority homeownership is more responsive to the composition of the central-city housing stock. Nevertheless, for every group there is a strong correspondence between homeownership and various individual-level factors: age, household composition, socioeconomic position and language acculturation. The observed differences in ownership are substantially attenuated when group differences in some of these variables are controlled.


Social Forces | 2000

The Changing Neighborhood Contexts of the Immigrant Metropolis

Richard Alba; John R. Logan; Brian J. Stults


Ethnic and Racial Studies | 1985

The twilight of ethnicity among Americans of European ancestry: The case of Italians*

Richard Alba


Sociological focus | 1995

WHO LIVES IN AFFLUENT SUBURBS? RACIAL DIFFERENCES IN ELEVEN METROPOLITAN REGIONS*

John R. Logan; Richard Alba


Archive | 2015

Mixed unions reveal progress in integration but also enduring societal social cleavages, which revolve around race in the US and religion in Europe

Richard Alba


Archive | 2015

3. Economic W ell-being

Richard Alba


Archive | 2015

9. Who Are the “We”? Identity and Mixed Unions

Richard Alba


Archive | 2015

1. Strangers No More: The Challenges of Integration

Richard Alba


Archive | 2015

2. Who Are the Immigrants? The Genesis of the New Diversity

Richard Alba

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