It is cruel to get children married when they are not happy or don't like the partner.' Who said this, a white-British or an Asian-British parent? 'I missed England ... I thought, when can I go back to England.' Where did this young person's parents originate? Many white-British believe that Asian families are likely to experience critical conflicts as their young people grow to adulthood in a new and different society: what do parents and young people in the families themselves think about this? And, correspondingly, what do they think about their white-British fellow citizens? The older and younger generations in immigrant families are likely to have adapted differentially to the customs of the majority society, and to vary in their contacts and their personal feelings of identity. Different lifestyles may affect their attitudes to and experience of prejudice, and they may differ in their hopes, fears and predictions about the future. In this book they express their own views, their differences and their similarities. Mutual understanding and harmonious interactions between citizens in our multicultural society are desirable goals; for those whose work involves contact with ethnic minorities they are essential goals. With its combination of grassroots information, statistical analysis and discursive synthesis, this book contributes to inter-ethnic understanding.
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Anbieter: PsychoBabel & Skoob Books, Didcot, Vereinigtes Königreich
hardcover. Zustand: Good. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Good. Hardcover. Jacket has some superficial scuffing and scoring. Spine is slightly sunned. Front lower edge has slight crease on jacket. Page block head and foot have a few minor marks. Book is slightly cocked. Name of previous owner (linguistics professor) penned on the front pastedown. Binding is tight. Pages are in excellent condition. BW. Used. Artikel-Nr. 270370
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