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Social Attitudes of Russian Immigrants to the United States

Social Attitudes of Russian Immigrants to the United States Abstract This study examined attitudes of Russian immigrants to the United States on women's equality, abortion, homosexuality, and Blacks. Interviews with first-generation immigrants were conducted, and their attitudes were compared with those reported in the 1991 General Social Survey of U.S. residents. The immigrants held more pro-abortion, anti-homosexual, and anti-Black attitudes than the Americans did; they were also less supportive of women's equality. Attitudes toward Blacks were reported to have undergone the most change after immigration, whereas attitudes toward abortion remained stable. Assimilation and conformity were associated with changes in the immigrants' social attitudes. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The Journal of Social Psychology Taylor & Francis

Social Attitudes of Russian Immigrants to the United States

The Journal of Social Psychology , Volume 136 (4): 14 – Aug 1, 1996

Social Attitudes of Russian Immigrants to the United States

The Journal of Social Psychology , Volume 136 (4): 14 – Aug 1, 1996

Abstract

Abstract This study examined attitudes of Russian immigrants to the United States on women's equality, abortion, homosexuality, and Blacks. Interviews with first-generation immigrants were conducted, and their attitudes were compared with those reported in the 1991 General Social Survey of U.S. residents. The immigrants held more pro-abortion, anti-homosexual, and anti-Black attitudes than the Americans did; they were also less supportive of women's equality. Attitudes toward Blacks were reported to have undergone the most change after immigration, whereas attitudes toward abortion remained stable. Assimilation and conformity were associated with changes in the immigrants' social attitudes.

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References (20)

Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
Copyright Taylor & Francis Group, LLC
ISSN
1940-1183
eISSN
0022-4545
DOI
10.1080/00224545.1996.9714024
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Abstract This study examined attitudes of Russian immigrants to the United States on women's equality, abortion, homosexuality, and Blacks. Interviews with first-generation immigrants were conducted, and their attitudes were compared with those reported in the 1991 General Social Survey of U.S. residents. The immigrants held more pro-abortion, anti-homosexual, and anti-Black attitudes than the Americans did; they were also less supportive of women's equality. Attitudes toward Blacks were reported to have undergone the most change after immigration, whereas attitudes toward abortion remained stable. Assimilation and conformity were associated with changes in the immigrants' social attitudes.

Journal

The Journal of Social PsychologyTaylor & Francis

Published: Aug 1, 1996

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