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Family Relationships, United States - Ethnic & Race Relations, Family - Sociocultural Aspects, Social Sciences - Research, Demography - United States
Complex Ethnic Households in America by Rae Lesser Blumberg — book cover

Complex Ethnic Households in America

by Rae Lesser Blumberg, Rae Lesser Blumberg (Editor), Anna Y. Chan
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Overview

What commonalities link Navajos in their vast Arizona reservation and rural whites in upstate New York? More than you would suspect when both live in complex households that include people other than nuclear kin. This groundbreaking interdisciplinary book on complex households in six U.S. ethnic groups-Navajos, whites, Inupiat of Alaska, African Americans in urban coastal Virginia, Korean immigrants in New York City, and Latino immigrants in central Virginia-uniquely combines rich ethnographic descriptions with theory-linked overviews and Census 2000 data. It explores interactions of household structure, ethnicity, and gender, while illuminating factors affecting the formation and dissolution of complex households, which are becoming increasingly important as ethnic diversity increases throughout the United States.

Synopsis

This lively interdisciplinary book on _complex households_ in six U.S. ethnic groups uniquely combines rich ethnographic description conveying the _sights and smells_ of fieldwork with theory-linked overviews and Census 2000 data. It explores interactions of household structure, ethnicity and gender, also illuminating factors affecting formation and dissolution of complex households, which are increasingly important as family and ethnic diversity - and immigration - grow. It's valuable for student and professional sociologists, anthropologists, demographers, research methodologists, policymakers and interested public.

About the Author, Rae Lesser Blumberg

Laurel Schwede is a research social scientist in the Statistical Research Division at the U.S. Census Bureau. Rae Lesser Blumberg is the William R. Kenan, Jr. professor of sociology at the University of Virginia. Anna Y. Chan is a research social scientist in the Statistical Research Division at the U.S. Census Bureau.

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Editorials

Contemporary Sociology

This is a gem of a book. It not only makes a significant contribution to scholarship, but is enjoyable to read.
With its unusual combination of ethnography, demography, and theoretical insights, the book would be useful in a variety of courses—including ethnic studies, anthropology, demography, and especially, the sociology of the family. Further, it contains an important message for social scientists, policy makers, and others who take it for granted that census bureau classifications of household and family structure and relationships are hard, objective data, valid for the entire population.

CHOICE

This book is both important and topical. Highly recommended.

Journal Of Official Statistics

This book is an important contribution to the fields of ethnic, gender, and family studies. [It] is a beautiful demonstration of an inherent problem in social research. ..the clash between the researcher's conceptualizations and the subjects' worldviews...[It] will teach the reader much more than just complex household formation. It is also a colorful and effective lesson on field research and techniques... A solid piece of work that teaches a lot about household formation at the beginning of the 21st century.

International Journal Of Multicultural Education

The book is a must-read for multicultural educators and scholars who work with and desire to gain in-depth understanding of the particular ethnic populations in and outside the studied communities. This book would also be particularly helpful to social scientists who are interested in combining census and ethnographic data in a meaningful cultural analysis of ethnic communities. 2008

Choice

This book is both important and topical. Highly recommended.

Sharon Hays

This important book opens the door to a rarely studied social world:complex households among six American ethnic groups. Its unique combination of fascinating ethnographies linked to census data on national and local family patterns introduces us to people who live in households very different from Ozzie and Harriet, and illuminates the rich complexity of multifaceted families at the intersections of ethnicity, gender, and domicile. This innovative text will be useful for a wide range of fields: sociology, demography, anthropology, ethnic studies, family studies, gender studies, and research methods.

Randall Collins

Households containing non-nuclear members are becoming increasingly common, and if current trends hold, represent a significant shift in household and family relations in twenty-first century America. This important book gives an in-depth view of how these complex households vary across ethnic groups, illustrating the mosaic of patterns that is changing American society.

November 2008 American Journal of Sociology

Unique... this volume should command the attention of family researchers, particularly those of a qualitative nature, for its unique concentration on comparison.

Book Details

Published
February 1, 2006
Publisher
The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group Inc
Pages
358
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780742546363

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