Running Head: ETHNIC GROUPS
Culture and the Assimilation of Ethnic Groups
Danielle Salazar
SOC 308 Racial & Ethnic Groups
Instructor: Gwendolen Stutler
November 4, 2019
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ETHNIC GROUPS
Culture and the Assimilation of Ethnic Groups
The definition of assimilation is to become like others or help another person to adapt to a
new environment. Many ethnic groups immigrate to a new country and often fleeing conflict in
their home country to make a better life for themselves and their families. Many ethnic groups
perceive the United States as a country with greater economic, political, and social opportunities,
and therefore, many immigrate to the country. There are many ethnic groups and different
cultures that come to the United States. An important concern in immigration research involves
the effects of immigration and assimilation on health, education, and social programs,
particularly in areas of high immigration concentration. According to the article National
Research Council (1996), “One of the most serious deficiencies in the area of immigration and
economic inequality is the absence of information about income and employment dynamics
among various segments of the foreign-born population. Virtually all national estimates of
immigrant employment, poverty, and welfare participation are based on data from the decennial
census or the Current Population Survey. Although static measures of poverty status and welfare
participation are useful for portraying aggregate trends and differentials in the prevalence of
poverty in a given year, they do not illustrate the dynamics of income stratification processes.”
Ethnic group assimilates contributes to and reinforces existing ethnic hierarchies and we
will explain if the mainstream society is more welcoming to newcomers if they assimilate or if
they retain some of their own cultural customs. There are many ethnic groups and cultures that
immigrate to the United States to be able to provide a better life to provide for their family and
better job opportunities to have in the US. “In fact, major streams of European immigration can