Intergenerational Assimilation by Intermarriage: Hispanic and Asian Immigrants
Margaret Gonsoulin & Xuanning Fu
Page 257-277 | Published online: 27 Jul 2010
Abstract
Using multigenerational data, intermarriage rates were examined among non-White, non-European immigrants to test two competing assimilation theories: classic assimilation theory and segmented assimilation theory. Later generations of Asian and Hispanic immigrants were more likely to outmarry than their first-generation relatives, an outcome predicted by both theories. High achieving Asians were not more likely to engage in outmarriage, whereas educational achievement was positively correlated with outmarriage rates among Hispanics. Classic assimilation theory predicts outmarriage only after structural assimilation is achieved; therefore, this study provided more evidence to support segmented assimilation theory. However, low socioeconomic status Hispanics and Asians were not more likely to outmarry non-Whites, as segmented assimilation theory would suggest.
KEYWORDS: assimilation, immigration, intermarriage,
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/01494929.2010.499320