Political Participation and Ethnic Minorities: Chinese Overseas in Malaysia, Indonesia, and the United States

Предња корица
Psychology Press, 2000 - 231 страница
From New York City's Chinatown to urban Indonesia, there are fifty-five million ethnic Chinese living outside of China. Their strong sense of community, along with their considerable economic clout, makes them a compelling group with which to study immigrant political participation. Amy Freedman's empirical study examines the hows and whys of Chinese overseas political activity in three diverse countries. When, and under what conditions, do immigrants become active in the political process? Does political influence stem from group mobilization? What role do communal organizations and their leaders play in determining participation? In answering these questions, Freedman assesses the goals and objectives of ethnic communities entering the political fray.

Из књиге

Садржај

V
1
VI
2
VII
3
VIII
8
IX
14
X
17
XI
19
XII
21
XLIII
123
XLIV
125
XLV
126
XLVII
129
XLVIII
131
XLIX
133
L
134
LI
137

XIV
23
XVII
28
XVIII
33
XIX
37
XX
43
XXI
47
XXII
49
XXIV
50
XXV
51
XXVI
53
XXVII
59
XXVIII
63
XXIX
75
XXX
85
XXXI
87
XXXII
89
XXXIII
90
XXXIV
96
XXXV
97
XXXVI
100
XXXVII
103
XXXVIII
112
XXXIX
116
XL
119
XLI
120
XLII
122
LIV
138
LV
144
LVI
145
LVII
149
LVIII
152
LIX
155
LX
156
LXI
157
LXII
159
LXIV
167
LXV
168
LXVI
173
LXVII
175
LXVIII
178
LXIX
180
LXX
181
LXXI
183
LXXII
185
LXXIII
189
LXXIV
193
LXXV
194
LXXVI
197
LXXVII
199
LXXVIII
209
LXXIX
223
Ауторска права

Друга издања - Прикажи све

Чести термини и фразе

О аутору (2000)

Amy L. Freedman is a Visiting Assistant Professor at Franklin and Marshall College. She received both her Ph.D. in comparative politics and international relations from New York University.

Библиографски подаци