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- Susan Tirone, PhD & Ashley Goodberry, MA Candidate
- School of Health and Human Performance, Dalhousie University
- National Metropolis Conference
- April 4, 2008
- Halifax, Nova Scotia
- Thank you to Atlantic
Metropolis Centre for the financial support for Phase 3
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- Part of a longitudinal, qualitative study
- Second generation young Canadians
- Parents from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh
- Youth born in Canada or arrived as children
- All youth attended school in Canada, parents did not
- Data collection, 1996-97/ 2001/ 2007
- 15 participants in total, 4 completed all 3 phases
- Average age at start: 18 years
- Hindu, Sikh, Muslim and Christian
- Varying SES
- eg. Parents were MD,s, restaurateurs, factory workers, accountants,
public housing, unemployed
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3
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- Phase one (PhD dissertation)
- Stand alone study of leisure and second generation ethic minority group
- Sensitizing concepts from previous study of immigrant mothers
- Evidence of benefits for longitudinal study
- Phase two
- Social integration over time
- Challenges, opportunities
- Phase three
- Final look at community embeddedness, social integration
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4
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- Cross sectional look at Phase three data
- 4 participants
- Late 20’s, all employed, university educated
- Major themes:
- Centrality of Cultural Heritage
- Transforming worlds
- Evolving individuality
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5
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6
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- I think, uhh, one of the things that we really need to do is talk. We
need to talk as people, as a society, we need to educate people more on
our cultures and our beliefs. And
just because one person blows up a building doesn’t mean we’re all bad
people . . . I make it a point every year, especially during Diwali, to
umm educate my co-workers and my American friends on the tradition and
the festival and what we do and how we celebrate. Everyone seems to enjoy it.
- I think there is a danger in labeling things racism when they may just
be childhood taunting and that’s not to belittle the experiences of
others but it’s just first of all it’s a very heavy word so we need to
be careful of when we use it.
Because if we use it too much it really discounts real incidents
of racism.
- Our family was party of establishing the mosque, the two mosques there
and the community center and uh me and my bother and sister, we, well
I’m not gonna say a big part but like we helped, helped a lot with
creating youth programs there cause like growing up there and being
among the oldest youth in [city] we felt, we realized that there was a
great need for Muslim youth to have a place where they could uh like
feel self confident and talk about issues that they could be dealing
with or whatever. Uhh so yeah, I’m really connected to the community
there uh yeah haha
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7
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- I think that it really happens through what I mentioned before, you know
going to a university and guess what, there’s all these different races
and you need to make sense of them. Having these friends who are African
American, friends who are white, friends who are Jewish, you know, going
to a wedding where a Jewish person and a black are marrying despite all
the parental uproar because they love each other and seeing that, I
think that’s the way it happens. And I think you know in Canada, because
of the multiculturalism that we do have, I I uh think that that is the
only way it really happens. (S)
- Umm, exposure and discussion, uh, when things are different from what we
know. There is this process of normalizing this and you know going from
fear and misunderstanding, etc, through to a process where it’s
something that’s special because it’s different and there’s kind of a
celebration around it, to the final step where it just the way it is,
there’s no need to necessarily, I don’t know that that’s just normal and
I think that that process needs to be accelerated haha. (A)
- Yeah, I think yeah I think it [recreation] would help them feel much
more welcome and help them learn about society in Canada, and feel
comfortable here and help them make connections with other people. Ummm
it could assist them and uhh give them opportunity to talk about
themselves. A lot of people go
through a sort of depression after they arrive here, cause I mean they
are leaving their whole social network behind…and they may be struggling
and and dealing with things they might not have realized, like how long
the winter is here haha (Z)
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- It’s sort of like a prom, without having to go the prom. And when we first came up with this
idea some of the older people in the community who were thinking about
it from a cultural point of view were like, oh you know that’s
inappropriate, the prom dresses, and I mean it’s just females so you
could wear whatever you want but people were hesitant about letting
their daughters dress that way or partying or the music…so that was a
struggle, so things like that do come up and uh becomes an issue so you
have to talk to everyone and sometimes you let things go for awhile and
sometimes you try to fight for your opinion.
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- Theoretical frameworks
- Life Worlds (Husserl, Shultz)
- Plurality, Multiculturalism (Bhabha, Tirone & Pedlar)
- Agency theory
- Leisure theory relevant to minority ethnic groups
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