Journal
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTERCULTURAL RELATIONS
Volume 34, Issue 2, Pages 101-113Publisher
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijintrel.2009.11.005
Keywords
Acculturation; Integration; Grassroots organization; Community-based research; Empowering community setting; Bruner; Citizenship; Moroccan women
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This paper describes the role of grassroots associations in the acculturative integration process from an approach that stresses the contributions of community and cultural psychologies. Community psychology allows us to understand the acculturative transition as an empowerment process by which immigrants transform both structural conditions and themselves. Cultural psychology explains this empowerment process as a self-construction through which immigrants acquire a new vision of the world and of themselves. From these insights, acculturative integration is understood as an active, multidimensional and ecological process in which immigrants become an accepted part of the new society through the development of critical awareness, gaining capacities and opportunities to influence their environment and involving themselves in activities which transform both their self and their environment. The promotion of grassroots organizations, as empowering community settings, is presented as a tool to bridge newcomers and the receiving society. This model is illustrated by the experience of Amal, a grassroots organization of Andalusian Moroccan women. Using the personal, organizational and community narratives of Amal (activists, recipients, community workers, policymakers and written documents), we describe the influence of citizen participation in the construction of self and citizenship among activists, the bettering of an integrative community, and the promotion of a fair multicultural society. Lessons learned will be summarized in order to pave the way for the implications of the Amal experience for acculturative research agendas and social policy and action. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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