Urban Geography
Volume 27, Issue 1, 2006, Pages 1-19

The immigrant household and spatial assimilation: Partnership, nativity, and neighborhood location (Article)

Ellis M.* , Wright R. , Parks V.
  • a Department of Geography, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195-3550, United States
  • b Department of Geography, Dartmouth College, 6017 Fairchild Hall, Hanover, NH 03755-3571, United States
  • c School of Social Service Administration, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States

Abstract

Spatial assimilation theory asserts that immigrants disperse from ethnic neighborhoods as they translate socioeconomic gains into more housing space and better residential environs. Models of this process typically relate the characteristics of individual immigrants to a locational outcome. The research described in this paper also considers immigrants in neighborhood context, but asks to what extent partnership and household composition shapes neighborhood location. This move "scales down" spatial assimilation research from the neighborhood and "scales up" more general assimilation scholarship from the individual to consider the household as a key decision-making unit. A sizeable proportion of immigrants have partners of a different nativity and this paper builds on this observation. Immigrants who are not partnered with a member of the same national origin group are much less likely to live in ethnic neighborhoods. The results have implications for future work on immigrant assimilation, conceptualizations of immigrant households, and residential segregation. Copyright © 2006 by V. H. Winston & Son, Inc. All rights reserved.

Author Keywords

Partnership Households spatial assimilation

Index Keywords

neighborhood ethnic group Acculturation immigrant population

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-33745481321&doi=10.2747%2f0272-3638.27.1.1&partnerID=40&md5=4594a2e5eafec35255601d512b96bd6b

DOI: 10.2747/0272-3638.27.1.1
ISSN: 02723638
Cited by: 31
Original Language: English