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Neighbourhoods and the creation, stability and success of mixed ethnic unions. Zhiqiang Feng Paul Boyle, Maarten van Ham, Gillian Raab. linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk. Why study mixed-ethnic unions?. Geographical Segregation
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Neighbourhoods and the creation, stability and success of mixed ethnic unions Zhiqiang Feng Paul Boyle, Maarten van Ham, Gillian Raab UPTAP Workshop linking lives through timewww.lscs.ac.uk
Why study mixed-ethnic unions? • Geographical Segregation • Numerous studies have ignored mixing within households/families • Government actively promotes integration of ethnic minorities • Mixed-ethnic unions • Demonstrate break-down of ethnic barriers and are suggestive of degree of ethnic integration in a society • Numbers are small but increasing • Create new minority groups-mixed ethnic groups UPTAP Workshop
Proportions of mixed-unions by ethnic group UPTAP Workshop England and Wales, Data Source: 1991 and 2001 HHSARs
Theories • Assimilation • Most assimilated groups more likely to cross ethnic lines to out-partner • Demography • Sex ratio • Relative size • Social exchange • Lower status majority members partner higher status minority members • Segregation • Reduce opportunity to meet potential partners UPTAP Workshop
Existing Studies in Britain • Data sources • Labour Force Surveys (Jones 1984, Coleman 1985, 2004) • The Fourth National Survey of Ethnic Minorities (1994) (Muttarak 2003) • Census • Household SARs (Berrington 1996, Model & Fisher 2002) • ONS LS (Muttarak 2005) UPTAP Workshop
Studies in Britain • Most are descriptive • They tend to use cross-sectional analyses UPTAP Workshop
Some results from previous studies • Positive effects: • Age • Second generation • Males • Educational attainment • Higher social class UPTAP Workshop
Some results from previous studies • Negative • Size of ethnic group • Residential segregation • Cultural distance UPTAP Workshop
Issues with cross-sectional analysis • We don’t know when or where marriage / cohabitation occurred • Prevalence vs incidence • Pre-marriage / cohabitation conditions unknown • Socio-economic situations may change after marriage / cohabitation • Not suitable for causal inference UPTAP Workshop
Longitudinal analysis • Identify people who were already in Britain before partnering occurred • Have data on pre-marriage / cohabiting situations • First British study to use the ONS LS and SLS to identify geographical influences on mixed-ethnic unions UPTAP Workshop
Why study neighbourhood effects? • Neighbourhoods may be important locations for social contacts • Places reflect social relations and constitute and reinforce social relations (Delaney 2002) • Places can be racialised – predominantly ethnic neighbourhoods may create “local cultures” which discourage mixed-ethnic unions UPTAP Workshop
Why study neighbourhood effects? • Previous studies find mixed-ethnic couples are more likely to live in mixed-ethnic neighbourhoods • However, it is not clear whether this is because mixed-ethnic couples form there or move there after marriage / cohabitation • Most studies use cross-sectional data so it is difficult to study event sequences UPTAP Workshop
Objectives • Measure the growth of mixed-ethnic couples and their changing geographical distribution between 1991 and 2001 • Test whether living in a mixed-ethnic neighbourhood makes it more likely that people will end up in mixed-ethnic couples • Test whether people in mixed-ethnic couples are more likely to move into mixed-ethnic neighbourhoods • Test whether mixed-ethnic couples are more likely to dissolve than single-ethnic couples UPTAP Workshop
Objectives 5. Test whether mixed-ethnic couples are less likely to dissolve if they live in mixed-ethnic neighbourhoods 6. Test whether living in a less deprived neighbourhood makes it more likely that people will end up in mixed-ethnic couples 7. Test whether people in mixed-ethnic couples are more likely to move into less deprived neighbourhoods UPTAP Workshop
Data source • ONS LS • Longitudinal 1971-2001 • 1% sample of England and Wales (500,000) • SLS • Longitudinal 1991-2001 • 5.3% sample of Scottish population (265,000) UPTAP Workshop
Definition of ethnic groups Presentation group in the study 1991 (ETHNIC9) 2001(ETHGRP0) White (W) White British Irish Other white Black (B) Black-Caribbean Black-Caribbean Black-African Black-African Black other Other Black Black & White White & Black Caribbean White & Black African* Asian (A) Indian Indian Pakistani Pakistani Bangladeshi Bangladeshi Other Asian (OA) Chinese Chinese Other Asian Other Asian Others (O) Other ethnic group: White & Asian non-mixed origin Other mixed Other ethnic group: Other ethnic group mixed origin UPTAP Workshop
Classifications of mixed-ethnic unions UPTAP Workshop
Number of mixed-ethnic unions England & Wales Mixed-ethnic unions 1991 2001 White / Black (WB) 1231 1737 White / Asian (WA) 641 902 White / Other Asians (WOA) 643 730 White / Others (WO) 998 1770 Total 3513 5139 UPTAP Workshop
Mixed ethnic neighbourhoods Relative size minority population / white population Exposure index Diversity Shannons entropy UPTAP Workshop
Mixed ethnic neighbourhoods • Continuous? or • Dichotomous? • Use different forms in different models? UPTAP Workshop
Methodology • Objective 1 (growth of mixed-ethnic unions, 1991 vs 2001) • ONS LS + SLS • Descriptive • Logistic / log-linear models UPTAP Workshop
Methodology • Objective 2 & 6 – whether mixed-ethnic neighbourhoods or less deprived neighbourhoods have positive effects on formation of mixed-ethnic unions • ONS LS data, 1981 vs 1991, 1991 vs 2001 • Whether people aged 6+ & single in 1981, ended up being married to, or cohabiting with, people from another ethnic group in 1991 • Repeat for 1991-2001 • Logistic & Heckman selection model controlling for probability of partnering UPTAP Workshop
Methodology • Objectives 3,4,5,7 – whether mixed-ethnic couples • More likely to move to mixed ethnic neighbourhood • More likely to dissolve than single ethnic couples • Less likely to dissolve if living in mixed-ethnic neighbourhoods • More likely to move into less deprived neighbourhoods • ONS LS 1991-2001 • Sample: People who were married or cohabiting in 1991 • Logistic model of the probability of these events in 2001 UPTAP Workshop
Individual variables UPTAP Workshop
Work so far • Literature review • Research design • SLS proposal approved • Data request sent to ONS LS UPTAP Workshop