Immigrant children and their parents: Is there an intergenerational interdependence of integration into social networks?

•Analyses the interdependence of multiplex networks of children's friendship, birthday parties and parents’ contact.•Parents’ networks affect children's birthday party networks, but the reversed causality is also significant – and even stronger.•Spatial proximity and ethnic homophily are f...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inSocial networks Vol. 40; pp. 197 - 206
Main Author Windzio, Michael
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 01.01.2015
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Summary:•Analyses the interdependence of multiplex networks of children's friendship, birthday parties and parents’ contact.•Parents’ networks affect children's birthday party networks, but the reversed causality is also significant – and even stronger.•Spatial proximity and ethnic homophily are favorable conditions for network ties.•Children's friendship and birthday party networks depend on empathy, low self-control; parents’ networks on similarity in cultural capital and type of housing.•Instrumental variables are used in a non-recursive multivariate probit ERGM. The paper investigates the integration of immigrant children and their parents in different dimensions of social networks – referred to as multiplexity in social network terminology. These dimensions are children's friendships, their attendance at birthday parties, and contact among their parents. By attending birthday parties, children's friendships are publicly reinforced and membership in a social circle is signified. During these events, communication and social exchange drive the process of social integration at the micro-level, and ethnic boundaries can be shifted or blurred. It will be shown that a variety of homophily effects can be found in all three network dimensions. In addition, ethnic segregation in parents’ networks has an impact on children's participation in these events and, thereby, on children's integration in social networks. However, the causal effect in the other way around – children's birthday party attendance on contact among their parents – is even stronger. A new approach is the non-recursive analysis of how ties in one network dimension effect ties in another dimension. Analyses are based on 76 social networks of 1266 children in school classes in the city state of Bremen, Germany.
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ISSN:0378-8733
1879-2111
DOI:10.1016/j.socnet.2014.11.002