posted on 2016-06-21, 00:00authored byJuan Martinez
This study examines intergroup relations in a new immigrant gateway, post white to Latino succession. Specifically, I explore how neighborhood succession engenders intergroup tensions in political, religious, and cultural dimensions of community life. I pay particular attention to how whites residents react to changes associated with neighborhood succession and how Latino residents respond and navigate these reactions. A core theme in this dissertation revolves around the concept of group threat, whereby white residents perceive the growing numbers of Latinos as a threat to social privilege and well-being within the spheres of neighborhood politics, religious institutions, and community cultural events. In doing so, I uncover how white/Latino relations are shaped by local contexts and social structures that facilitate or impede newcomers’ integration into neighborhood life.
History
Advisor
Flores-Gonzalez, Nilda
Department
Sociology
Degree Grantor
University of Illinois at Chicago
Degree Level
Doctoral
Committee Member
Bielby, William
Warner, Robert S.
Boyd, Michelle
Lewis, Amanda E.
Forman, Tyrone A.