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Changes in Turkish- and Resettler-origin Adolescents' Acculturation Profiles of Identification: A Three-year Longitudinal Study from Germany.

Authors :
Jugert, Philipp
Pink, Sebastian
Fleischmann, Fenella
Leszczensky, Lars
Source :
Journal of Youth & Adolescence. Dec2020, Vol. 49 Issue 12, p2476-2494. 19p. 1 Diagram, 8 Charts, 1 Graph.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Little is known on how ethnic minority adolescents develop acculturation profiles of identification (i.e., how they combine their ethnic and national identification, such as being high on both and thus rather "integrated" or high on ethnic and low on national and thus rather "separated"). In a first step, this 3-year longitudinal study classified Turkish (n = 344) and resettler-origin (n = 121) ethnic minority adolescents living in Germany (Mage = 14.2, SD = 1.54, 51.6% female) according to their levels of ethnic and national identification. Latent profile analyses identified four profiles (separated, integrated, medium-ethnic, low-ethnic) for the former and three profiles (separated, integrated, low-and-medium ethnic) for the latter group. Latent transition analyses revealed considerable instability of profile attributions over time. Integration declined among both groups and results provided no evidence that national group boundaries are more permeable for resettler-origin than for Turkish-origin adolescents. Additional analyses revealed that perceived ethnic discrimination affected the probability to be in a particular profile but did not moderate transition probabilities. Overall, results suggest that during early-to-mid adolescence it is increasingly difficult to uphold a dual identity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00472891
Volume :
49
Issue :
12
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Youth & Adolescence
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
146601585
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10964-020-01250-w