4.3 Article

Beyond ethnic solidarity: the diversity and specialisation of social ties in a stigmatised migrant minority

Journal

JOURNAL OF ETHNIC AND MIGRATION STUDIES
Volume 48, Issue 13, Pages 3113-3141

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/1369183X.2021.1903305

Keywords

Egocentric networks; community; Roma; social integration; ethnic homophily

Funding

  1. Directions de la Recherche Sciences Po, REPIN project

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The study found that among Romanian Roma migrants in France, their social support differs from the assumptions of ethnic solidarity, sociodemographic homophily, and network closure. Instead, they align more closely with the model of 'networked individualism', maintaining diverse and far-reaching networks, choosing forms of elective belonging, and mobilizing different social ties for specialized support.
Whether presented as ethnic 'solidarity' or 'segregation', the idea that migrants' social world is dominated by tightly-knit, homogeneous, and supportive networks of kin and co-ethnics is common in scholarly and public discourse around migration, particularly for minorities with a history of marginalisation, segregation, and stigmatisation. We test this idea using results from the first survey of personal networks in one of the most stigmatised immigrant minorities in the Western world: Roma migrants in Europe. Analysing data on 119 Romanian Roma migrants in France and their 3,570 social ties, we identify typical structures of personal communities, describe the distribution and association of different dimensions of social support, and estimate multilevel models to identify determinants of support in this population. We find that, even in contexts of strong marginalisation and stigmatisation, the hypotheses of ethnic solidarity, sociodemographic homophily, and network closure are inadequate to explain the way migrants obtain social support. Instead, Romanian Roma in France appear much closer to the model of 'networked individualism' and similar to middle classes in Western ethnic majorities, as they strategically maintain diverse and far-flung networks, choose forms of elective belonging in local contexts, and mobilise different social ties for different, specialised types of support.

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