Social Problems
Volume 58, Issue 1, 2011, Pages 144-163
Refugees, rights, and race: How legal status shapes Liberian immigrants' relationship with the state (Article)
Brown H.E.
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a
Department of Sociology, 410 Barrows Hall, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720, United States
Abstract
Drawing on three years of participant observation in a Liberian immigrant community, this article examines the role of legal refugee status in immigrants' daily encounters with the state. Using the literature on immigrant incorporation, claims making, and citizenship, it argues that refugee status profoundly shapes individuals' views and expectations of their host government as well as their interactions with the medical, educational, and social service institutions they encounter. The refugees in this study use their refugee status to make claims for legal and social citizenship and to distance themselves from native-born blacks. In doing so, they validate their own position vis-à-vis the state and in the American ethno-racial hierarchy. The findings presented demonstrate how refugee status operates as a symbolic and interpretive resource used to negotiate the structural realities of the welfare state and American race relations. These results stress the importance of studying immigrant incorporation from a micro perspective and suggest mechanisms for the adaptational advantages for refugees reported in existing research. copy; 2011 by Society for the Study of Social Problems, Inc. All rights reserved.
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-79954563543&doi=10.1525%2fsp.2011.58.1.144&partnerID=40&md5=9691dcc6ebeee2d36474d2fc39579a4c
DOI: 10.1525/sp.2011.58.1.144
ISSN: 00377791
Cited by: 22
Original Language: English