1. Bicultural identity conflict in second-generation Asian Canadians.
- Author
-
Stroink ML and Lalonde RN
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Asia ethnology, Asian People psychology, Canada epidemiology, Female, Humans, Male, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Asian People statistics & numerical data, Conflict, Psychological, Cultural Diversity, Social Identification
- Abstract
Researchers have shown that bicultural individuals, including 2nd-generation immigrants, face a potential conflict between 2 cultural identities. The present authors extended this primarily qualitative research on the bicultural experience by adopting the social identity perspective (H. Tajfel & J. C. Turner, 1986). They developed and tested an empirically testable model of the role of cultural construals, in-group prototypicality, and identity in bicultural conflict in 2 studies with 2nd-generation Asian Canadians. In both studies, the authors expected and found that participants' construals of their 2 cultures as different predicted lower levels of simultaneous identification with both cultures. Furthermore, the authors found this relation was mediated by participants' feelings of prototypicality as members of both groups. Although the perception of cultural difference did not predict well-being as consistently and directly as the authors expected, levels of simultaneous identification did show these relations. The authors discuss results in the context of social identity theory (H. Tajfel & J. C. Turner) as a framework for understanding bicultural conflict.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF