Multiculturalism and Intergroup Relations
By (Author) James S. Frideres
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
12th January 1989
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Ethnic studies
305.800971
Hardback
194
Written by some of the most distinguished scholars in the field of ethnic relations, this volume examines the role of ethnicity in modern day society and the impact of government policy on ethnic relations. International in scope, the essays look at a number of different but interrelated issues--aging, identity, minority groups, and others--examining each from a multidisciplinary perspective. Coverage ranges from the problems of Asian Americans to integration issues in Israel and the relationship between ethnic diversity and patterns of retirement. The contributions include both theoretical and empirical works. The first section of the study presents the primary issues and central concepts involved in the study of multiculturalism in modern day societies. Specific chapters address such issues as the vesting of ethnic interests in state institutions, state policies toward subordinate ethnics, and government efforts to address multiculturalism. Particularly valuable is a retrospective analysis of Canada's Bilingual and Bicultural Report. The next section contains detailed case studies which identify specific ethnic groups and analyze their current societal roles. In the final chapters, the contributors present two projections of what ethnic relations will be like in the twenty-first century as North America becomes more multi-ethnic and multilingual. Taken together, the essays offer an illuminating overview of the nature of multiculturalism in widely diverse societies.
A slight collection of 13 papers delivered at a Canadian conference on multiculturalism. The opening chapters deal descriptively with official government policy. Chapter 3, by Heribert Adam, provides a more sociological perspective on what he identifies as five types of state policy. In an interesting case study, Edward Boldt presents a sketch of the controlled acculturation of the Hutterites in Canada. K. Victor Ujimoto's essay on aging and multicultural relations is an important reminder to students of intergroup relations who tend to deal with ethnic groups as homogeneous populations and to gerontologists who overlook the ethnic factor. Little new ground is broken by any of the contributors although, all together, the essays form a competent introduction to the issues of multiculturalism.' . . .-Choice
"A slight collection of 13 papers delivered at a Canadian conference on multiculturalism. The opening chapters deal descriptively with official government policy. Chapter 3, by Heribert Adam, provides a more sociological perspective on what he identifies as five types of state policy. In an interesting case study, Edward Boldt presents a sketch of the controlled acculturation of the Hutterites in Canada. K. Victor Ujimoto's essay on aging and multicultural relations is an important reminder to students of intergroup relations who tend to deal with ethnic groups as homogeneous populations and to gerontologists who overlook the ethnic factor. Little new ground is broken by any of the contributors although, all together, the essays form a competent introduction to the issues of multiculturalism.' . . ."-Choice
JAMES S. FRIDERES is Professor of Sociology The University of Calgary. He is currently the Associate Dean of Research for the Faculty of Social Sciences. His recent works include Native People in Canada and Ethnicity in Canada (co-author). He is the co-editor of the journal Canadian Ethnic Studies.