When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Cultural assimilation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_assimilation

    An example of voluntary cultural assimilation would be during the Spanish Inquisition, when Jews and Muslims accepted the Roman Catholic Church as their religion, but meanwhile, many people still privately practised their traditional religions. That type of assimilation is used to convince a dominant power that a culture has peacefully ...

  3. Social integration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_integration

    Social integration does not mean forced assimilation. Social integration is focused on the need to move toward a safe, stable and just society by mending conditions of social conflict , social disintegration , social exclusion , social fragmentation, exclusion and polarization , and by expanding and strengthening conditions of social ...

  4. Monoculturalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monoculturalism

    Monoculturalism is the policy or process of supporting, advocating, or allowing the expression of the culture of a single social or ethnic group. [1] It generally stems from beliefs within the dominant group that their cultural practices are superior to those of minority groups [2] and is often related to the concept of ethnocentrism, which involves judging another culture based on the values ...

  5. Acculturation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acculturation

    Although this view was the earliest to fuse micro-psychological and macro-social factors into an integrated theory, it is clearly focused on assimilation rather than racial or ethnic integration. In Kim's approach, assimilation is unilinear and the sojourner must conform to the majority group culture in order to be "communicatively competent."

  6. Assimilation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assimilation

    Jewish assimilation refers to the gradual cultural assimilation and social integration of Jews in their surrounding culture; Religious assimilation refers to the adoption of a majority or dominant culture's religious practices and beliefs by a minority or subordinate culture; Assimilation effect, a frequently observed bias in social cognition

  7. Forced assimilation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forced_assimilation

    Forced assimilation is the involuntary cultural assimilation of religious or ethnic minority groups, during which they are forced by a government to adopt the language, national identity, norms, mores, customs, traditions, values, mentality, perceptions, way of life, and often the religion and ideology of an established and generally larger community belonging to a dominant culture.

  8. Sociology of immigration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sociology_of_immigration

    The sociology of immigration involves the sociological analysis of immigration, particularly with respect to race and ethnicity, social structure, and political policy. Important concepts include assimilation , enculturation , marginalization , multiculturalism , postcolonialism , transnationalism and social cohesion .

  9. Assimilation and contrast effects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assimilation_and_contrast...

    Assimilation effects arise in fields of social cognition, for example in the field of judgment processes or in social comparison. Whenever researchers conduct attitude surveys and design questionnaires, they have to take judgment processes and resulting assimilation effects into account. Assimilation and contrast effects may arise through the ...