Volume 33 - Article 10 | Pages 273–312
Union formation and dissolution among immigrants and their descendants in the United Kingdom
References
Adsera, A. and Chiswick, B.R. (2007). Are there gender and country of origin differences in immigrant labor market outcomes across European destinations? Journal of Population Economics 20(3): 495−526.
Aeberhardt, R., Fougere, D., Pouget, J., and Rathelot, R. (2010). Wages and employment of French workers with African origin. Journal of Population Economics 23(3): 881−905.
Alba, R. (2005). Bright vs. blurred boundaries: Second-generation assimilation and exclusion in France, Germany, and the United States. Ethnic and Racial Studies 28(1): 20−49.
Alexander, M., Garda, L., Kanade, S., Jejeebhoy, S., and Ganatra, B. (2006). Romance and Sex: Pre-Marital Partnership Formation among Young Women and Men, Pune District, India. Reproductive Health Matters 14(28): 144−155.
Andersson, G. (2004). Childbearing after migration: Fertility patterns of foreign-born women in Sweden. International Migration Review 38(2): 747−774.
Aparicio, R. (2007). The integration of the second and 1.5 generations of Moroccan, Dominican and Peruvian origin in Madrid and Barcelona. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 33(7): 1169−1193.
Arbaci, S. (2008). (Re)viewing ethnic residential segregation in Southern European cities: Housing and urban regimes as mechanisms of marginalisation. Housing Studies 23(4): 589−613.
Bauböck, R. (2003). Towards a political theory of migrant transnationalism. International Migration Review 37(3): 700−723.
Beaujouan, É. and Ní Bhrolcháin, M. (2011). Cohabitation and marriage in Britain since the 1970s. Population Trends 145(Autumn Issue): 35−59.
Bernhardt, E., Goldscheider, F., and Goldscheider, C. (2007). Integrating the second generation: Gender and family attitudes in early adulthood in Sweden (Die zweite Generation integrieren: Geschlechtsrollen- und Familienvorstellungen im frühen Erwachsenenalter in Schweden). Zeitschrift für Familienforschung 1: 55−70.
Berrington, A. (1994). Marriage and family formation among the white and ethnic minority populations in Britain. Ethnic and Racial Studies 17(3): 517−546.
Berrington, A. (1996). Marriage patterns and inter-ethnic unions. In: Coleman, D. and Salt, J. (eds.). Ethnicity in the 1991 Census, Volume One: Demographic Characteristics of the Ethnic Minority Populations. London, UK: HMSO, Office for National Statistics: 178−212.
Berrington, A. and Diamond, I. (2000). Marriage or cohabitation: A competing risks analysis of first-partnership formation among the 1958 British Birth cohort. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series A (Statistics in Society) 163(2): 127−151.
Billari, F. and Kohler, H.-P. (2004). Patterns of low and lowest-low fertility in Europe. Population Studies 58(2): 161−176.
Brinbaum, Y. and Cebolla-Boado, H. (2007). The school careers of ethnic minority youth in France: Success or disillusion? Ethnicities 7(3): 445−474.
Castles, S. and Miller, M.J. (2009). The age of migration: International population movements in the modern world. New York: Guilford Press.
Coleman, D.A. (1985). Interethnic marriage in Great Britain. Population Trends 40: 4−10.
Coleman, D.A. (1994). Trends in fertility and intermarriage among immigrant populations in Western-Europe as measure of integration. Journal of Biosocial Science 26(1): 107−136.
Coleman, D.A. and Dubuc, S. (2010). The fertility of ethnic minorities in the UK, 1960s-2006. Population Studies 64(1): 19−41.
Dribe, M. and Lundh, C. (2012). Intermarriage, value context and union dissolution: Sweden 1990-2005. European Journal of Population 28(2): 139−158.
Ermisch, J. and Francesconi, M. (2000). Cohabitation in Great Britain: Not for long, but here to stay. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series A (Statistics in Society) 163(2): 153−171.
Fassmann, H. (1997). Is the Austrian labour market ethnically segmented? European Journal of Population 13(1): 17−32.
Feng, Z., Boyle, P., van Ham, M., and Raab, G.M. (2012). Are mixed-ethnic unions more likely to dissolve than co-ethnic unions? New evidence from Britain. European Journal of Population 28(2): 159−176.
Fibbi, R., Lerch, M., and Wanner, P. (2007). Naturalisation and socio-economic characteristics of youth of immigrant descent in Switzerland. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 33(7): 1121−1144.
Foner, N. and Alba, R. (2008). Immigrant religion in the US and Western Europe: Bridge or barrier to inclusion? International Migration Review 42(2): 360−392.
Goldscheider, F., Goldscheider, C., and Bernhardt, E.M. (2011). Creating egalitarian families among the adult children of Turkish- and Polish-origin immigrants in Sweden. International Migration Review 45(1): 68−88.
González-Ferrer, A. (2006). Who do immigrants marry? Partner choice among single immigrants in Germany. European Sociological Review 22(2): 171−185.
Gungor, D., Fleischmann, F., and Phalet, K. (2011). Religious identification, beliefs, and practices among Turkish Belgian and Moroccan Belgian Muslims: Intergenerational continuity and acculturative change. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology 42(8): 1356−1374.
Hampshire, K., Blell, M., and Simpson, B. (2012). Navigating new socio-demographic landscapes: Using anthropological demography to understand the 'Persistence' of high and early fertility among British Pakistanis. European Journal of Population 28(1): 39−63.
Hannemann, T. (2012). It breaks a man’s heart: Socioeconomic differences in the onset of cardiovascular disease in contemporary Sweden. [PhD thesis]. Lund, Sweden: Lund University, Department of Economic History.
Howard, M.M. (2005). Variation in dual citizenship policies in the countries of the EU. International Migration Review 39(3): 697−720.
Jones, P.R. (1984). Ethnic intermarriage in Britain: A further assessment. Ethnic and Racial Studies 7(3): 398−405.
Kalmijn, M. and van Tubergen, F. (2006). Ethnic intermarriage in the Netherlands: Confirmations and refutations of accepted insights. European Journal of Population 22(4): 371−397.
Katus, K., Puur, A., and Sakkeus, L. (2002). Immigrant population in Estonia. In: Haug, W., Compton, P., and Courbage, Y. (eds.). The demographic characteristics of immigrant population in Europe. Strasbourg: Council of Europe Publishing: 131−192.
Kogan, I. (2007). A study of immigrants' employment careers in West Germany using the sequence analysis technique. Social Science Research 36(2): 491−511.
Kristen, C., Reimer, D., and Kogan, I. (2008). Higher education entry of Turkish immigrant youth in Germany. International Journal of Comparative Sociology 49(2-3): 127−151.
Kulu, H. (2005). Migration and fertility: Competing hypotheses re-examined. European Journal of Population 21(1): 51−87.
Kulu, H. and González-Ferrer, A. (2014). Family dynamics among immigrants and their descendants in Europe: Current research and opportunities. European Journal of Population 30(4): 411−435.
Kulu, H. and Milewski, N. (2007). Family change and migration in the life course: An introduction. Demographic Research 17(19): 567−590.
Meurs, D., Pailhé, A., and Simon, P. (2006). The persistence of intergenerational inequalities linked to immigration: Labour market outcomes for immigrants and their descendants in France. Population 61(5-6): 763−801.
Milewski, N. (2007). First child of immigrant workers and their descendants in West Germany: Interrelation of events, disruption or adaptation? Demographic Research 17(29): 859−895.
Milewski, N. (2010). Immigrant fertility in West Germany: Is there a socialization effect in transitions to second and third births? European Journal of Population 26(3): 297−323.
Milewski, N. and Kulu, H. (2014). Mixed marriages in Germany: A high risk of divorce for immigrant-native couples. European Journal of Population 30(1): 89−113.
Miner, D.C. (2003). Jamaican families. Holistic Nursing Practice 17(1): 27−35.
Murphy, M. (2000). The evolution of cohabitation in Britain, 1960-95. Population Studies 54(1): 43−56.
Musterd, S. (2005). Social and ethnic segregation in Europe: Levels, causes and effects. Journal of Urban Affairs 27(3): 331−348.
Office, for National Statistics (2013). Immigration patterns of non-UK born populations in England and Wales in 2011. Office for National Statistics.
Peach, C. (1998). South Asian and Caribbean ethnic minority housing choice in Britain. Urban Studies 35(10): 1657−1680.
Rebhun, U. (2010). Immigration, gender and earnings in Israel. European Journal of Population 26(1): 73−97.
Rendall, M.S., Tsang, F., Rubin, J.K., Rabinovich, L., and Janta, B. (2010). Contrasting trajectories of labor-market integration between migrant women in Western and Southern Europe. European Journal of Population 26(4): 383−410.
Seifert, W. (1997). Admission policy, patterns of migration and integration: The German and French case compared. New Community 23(4): 441−460.
Singley, S.G. and Landale, N.S. (1998). Incorporating origin and process in migration-fertility frameworks: The case of Puerto Rican women. Social Forces 76(4): 1437−1464.
Sobotka, T. and Toulemon, L. (2008). Changing family and partnership behaviour: Common trends and persistent diversity across Europe. Demographic Research S7(6): 85−138.
Sole-Auro, A. and Crimmins, E.M. (2008). Health of immigrants in European countries. International Migration Review 42(4): 861−876.
Toulemon, L. (2004). Fertility among immigrant women: New data, new approach. Population and Societies 400(1–4).
Van Niekerk, M. (2007). Second-generation Caribbeans in the Netherlands: Different migration histories, diverging trajectories. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 33(7): 1063−1081.
Voas, D. (2009). The maintenance and transformation of ethnicity: Evidence on mixed partnerships in Britain. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 35(9): 1497−1513.
Wengler, A. (2011). The health status of first- and second-generation Turkish immigrants in Germany. International Journal of Public Health 56(5): 493−501.