What does it mean to become an adult in the face of economic uncertainty and increasing racial and immigrant diversity? Nearly half of all young people in the United States are racial minorities, and one in four are from immigrant families. Diversity and the Transition to Adulthood in America offers a comprehensive overview of young people across racial and immigrant groups and their paths through traditional markers of adulthood—from finishing education, working full time, and establishing residential independence to getting married and having children. Taking a look at the diversity of experiences, the authors uncover how the transition to adulthood is increasingly fragmented, especially among those without college degrees. This book will introduce students to immigrant, racial, and ethnic diversity in the transition to adulthood in contemporary America.
Diversity and the Transition to Adulthood in America
About the Book
Reviews
"Phoebe Ho, Hyunjoon Park, and Grace Kao provide one of the best succinct descriptions I have ever read of historical trends in immigration policy and the ways that populations diversify over time."—Robert Crosnoe, Associate Dean of Liberal Arts and Rapoport Centennial Professor of Sociology, University of Texas at Austin"Ho, Park, and Kao provide a compelling story of the different paths to adulthood in America today. Written with engaging prose, the book documents how the decline in universal marriage and childbearing, along with increasing income inequality, has yielded not only greater diversity in living arrangements among young adults, but also how this diversity varies by race, educational attainment, and immigrant generation. This will be a valuable course book for students of immigration and inequality."—John Iceland, series editor, Sociology in the Twenty-First Century
Table of Contents
Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Defining and Giving Context to the
Transition to Adulthood
1. Understanding the New Face of America: Racial
and Ethnic Diversity and Immigration
2. Getting Ahead, Falling Behind: Education and
Employment
3. Settling In, Settling Down: Household and
Family Formation
4. Connecting Milestones: Profiles of Adulthood
5. Exploring a Mosaic of Experiences: Ethnicity,
Immigrant Status, and Sexual Orientation
6. Envisioning the Transition to Adulthood Today and
in the Future
Appendix
Notes
References
Index