articleAmerican Journal of SociologyMay 1, 2003Closed access

Assimilation and Transnationalism: Determinants of Transnational Political Action among Contemporary Migrants

University of California, Davis · Princeton University

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Abstract

This article presents evidence of the scale, relative intensity, and social determinants of immigrants’ transnational political engagement. It demonstrates that a stable and significant transnational field of political action connecting immigrants with their polities of origin does indeed exist. The results help temper celebratory images of the extent and effects of transnational engagement provided by some scholars. The article shows that migrants’ habitual transnational political engagement is far from being as extensive, socially unbounded, “deterritorialized,” and liberatory as previously argued. Transnational political action, then, is regularly undertaken by a small minority, is socially bounded across…

Citation impact

1,154
total citations
FWCI
82.11
Percentile
100%
References
115
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Transnationalism
  • Immigration
  • Politics
  • Political action
  • Action (physics)
  • Sociology
  • Power (physics)
  • Gender studies
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Reduced inequalities
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