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From Chinatown to Every Town
by
Deane, Glenn
, Li, Jiejin
, Li, Zhen
, Zhou, Bo
, Liang, Zai
in
Asian cultural groups
/ Chinese Americans
/ Chinese languages
/ Cities
/ Crime
/ Criminal statistics
/ Destinations
/ Employment
/ Employment agencies
/ Employment Patterns
/ Ethnicity
/ Forecasts and trends
/ Immigrants
/ Labor market
/ Labour market
/ Market trend/market analysis
/ Migrant workers
/ Mobility
/ Noncitizens
/ Occupational mobility
/ Occupations
/ Restaurants
/ Rural areas
/ Rural communities
/ Settlement patterns
/ Social aspects
/ Unemployment
/ White people
/ WORK AND IMMIGRATION
2018
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From Chinatown to Every Town
by
Deane, Glenn
, Li, Jiejin
, Li, Zhen
, Zhou, Bo
, Liang, Zai
in
Asian cultural groups
/ Chinese Americans
/ Chinese languages
/ Cities
/ Crime
/ Criminal statistics
/ Destinations
/ Employment
/ Employment agencies
/ Employment Patterns
/ Ethnicity
/ Forecasts and trends
/ Immigrants
/ Labor market
/ Labour market
/ Market trend/market analysis
/ Migrant workers
/ Mobility
/ Noncitizens
/ Occupational mobility
/ Occupations
/ Restaurants
/ Rural areas
/ Rural communities
/ Settlement patterns
/ Social aspects
/ Unemployment
/ White people
/ WORK AND IMMIGRATION
2018
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Do you wish to request the book?
From Chinatown to Every Town
by
Deane, Glenn
, Li, Jiejin
, Li, Zhen
, Zhou, Bo
, Liang, Zai
in
Asian cultural groups
/ Chinese Americans
/ Chinese languages
/ Cities
/ Crime
/ Criminal statistics
/ Destinations
/ Employment
/ Employment agencies
/ Employment Patterns
/ Ethnicity
/ Forecasts and trends
/ Immigrants
/ Labor market
/ Labour market
/ Market trend/market analysis
/ Migrant workers
/ Mobility
/ Noncitizens
/ Occupational mobility
/ Occupations
/ Restaurants
/ Rural areas
/ Rural communities
/ Settlement patterns
/ Social aspects
/ Unemployment
/ White people
/ WORK AND IMMIGRATION
2018
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Journal Article
From Chinatown to Every Town
2018
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Overview
Building on the growing literature on new immigrant destinations, this paper examines new employment patterns of low-skilled Chinese immigrants in the United States. We identify an important channel of employment in new destinations for the case of Chinese low-skilled immigrants: employment agencies in New York City’s Chinatown. We carried out two surveys of employment agencies during 2010–2011. Our findings suggest that there has been a profound change in settlement patterns of low-skilled immigrants: moving away from traditional Chinatowns in major American cities toward non-gateway destinations and rural areas. These new settlement locations are characterized by a low unemployment rate and low crime rate. Contrary to predictions from ethnic economy and mainstream economic perspectives, Chinese restaurant jobs tend not to be in places with a high concentration of Chinese immigrants, but rather in places with a high proportion of non-Hispanic whites. In addition, the farther the jobs are from New York City, the higher the salary. We discuss the implications of this fundamental change for re-conceptualizing the immigrant labor market and immigrant socioeconomic mobility in American society.
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Subject
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