Immigrant Segregation and Incorporation in France
Type de matériel :
34
Using several methodological approaches and making unprecedented use of data from six censuses, the article provides a panoramic view of immigrant segregation in France from 1968 to 2007. During that period, segregation intensity diminished for each immigrant-origin group considered separately while increasing for all immigrants taken together. The fall by national origin is due to the combined effects of withdrawal from highly segregated neighborhoods and a decrease in the share of neighborhoods inhabited almost exclusively by native-born French. The overall rise in segregation is due to the change in migration composition—a shift from European to non-European migrants—that occurred over the forty-year period. Lastly, focusing on neighborhoods that are “in the news” obscures the fact that a great majority of immigrants, including non-European ones, were residentially incorporated during the period, a finding that goes against the widespread image in France of immigrants living in ghetto-like situations.
Réseaux sociaux