This chapter examines on the basis of quantitative data the social and professional development of immigrants to Germany. It shows that, if immigrants tend to extract themselves from the lower strata of the working class as the generations progress, the social and cultural does not necessarily accompany this development, and even can worsen over time in some cases.
Immigration - Germany
Wolfgang SEIFERT is a Demographer, a professor at the Humboldt University Berlin, Germany.
Author Name (Year), “Title”, in: The International Scope Review, Volume Number, Issue Number, TSCF Editions, Brussels.
This book is the outcome of a collective reflection on immigration and interethnic relationships by a multidisciplinary academic team.
Translation in English by Patrick HUNOUT and Ellen MOORE-BOOHAR.
A part of this book has been realized thanks to the financial support of the Robert Bosch Foundation and the French-German Youth Office.
All work published in The International Scope Review is subject to copyright and may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, in any manner or in any medium – unless written consent is given by The Social Capital Foundation represented by its President, unless the author’s name and the one of The International Scope Review as the first publication medium appear on the work or the excerpt, and unless no charge is made for the copy containing the work or excerpt.
Any demands for obtaining consent for reproduction should be sent to sg@socialcapital.is
This is a PDF document.You may need Acrobat Plugin to view it. |