Ethnic segregation and residential mobility: relocations of minority ethnic groups in the Netherlands.
Publication date
2010
Authors
Bolt, G.S.
Kempen, R. van
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Document Type
Article
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2010
Abstract
The degree of spatial segregation and concentration of minority ethnic groups in European
cities is well documented. However, little is known about the residential mobility between
neighbourhoods that brings about changes in the patterns of ethnic segregation. In this
paper we analyse the residential mobility of minority ethnic groups from an assimilation
perspective, according to which moving out of ethnic into predominantly white
neighbourhoods can be seen as an indicator of immigrants’ incorporation into
mainstream society. Residential mobility into white neighbourhoods is therefore expected
to be a function of socio-economic mobility and acculturation at the individual level. The
prospect for the long term is that differences in residential mobility behaviour based on
ethnic status should gradually disappear. However, in our comparison between the biggest
minority ethnic groups in the Netherlands and the native majority, we find only partial
confirmation for the assimilation perspective.
Keywords
Residential Segregation, Residential Mobility, Assimilation, Ethnic Concentration, The Netherlands