Title: Beyond Assimilation The second Generation Debate in France
1Beyond AssimilationThe second Generation Debate
in France
2Outline
- The integrationnist paradigm and its crisis
- The second generation or the challenge to the
unity - The categorisations controversy diversity and
colorblindness - Anti-discrimination policies strategies and
shortcomings
3The Integrationnist Paradigm
- Merging the immigrants in the French crucible
there aint no minorities in France - Integration is a way to obtain the active
participation to society as a whole of all women
and men who are lastingly going to live on our
land while overtly accepting that specific,
mostly cultural, features will be preserved and
nevertheless insisting on the similarities and
the convergence, with equal rights and duties for
all in order to preserve the cohesion of our
social fabric. Integration considers that
differences are a part of a common project unlike
either assimilation which aims at suppressing
differences, or indeed insertion which
establishes that their perpetuation is a
guarantee for protection.
4 The crisis of the french model of Integration
- Despite huge acculturation, visibility of
migrants and their descendents remains quite high
- Claims for recognition ( Droit à la
différence ) is combined with civil rights
activism during the Marches pour légalité
(1983-1984) - Beurs as hyphenated French the first step
towards multiculturalism - Rise of awareness about ethnic and racial
discriminations against French citizens - Riots in deprived sub-urbs the republican model
and its discontents
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6Study on social mobility for 2nd Generation in
France (Meurs, Pailhé and Simon, 2006)
- Family History Survey linked to the 1999 census
- Identification by
- Citizenship at birth
- Country of birth
- Country of birth of parents
- Sample of 380000 individuals
- Large size to breakdown by specific ethnicity
- To reduce the age structure effects analysis
conducted on the 18-40 years old
7Categories
- Immigrants Foreign born with a foreign
citizenship, migration after 10 (6483 obs) - Generation 1.5 immigrants who have migrated
before 10 (2882 obs) - Generation 2 Born in France from two immigrants
parents (8698 obs) - Mixed Generation 2 Born in France from a mixed
parentage (11497 obs) - Natives Born in France from 2 parents born in
France (118 380 obs).
8Unemployment rate
MEN
WOMEN
9Unemployment rates for 3 ethnic groups
MEN
WOMEN
10Relative risk for being unemployed (ref natives)
11Relative risks of being unemployed by ethnicity
(ref natives)
12Relative risks of not having long term contract
13Relative risks of not having long term contract
14Proportion of public servants
15Relative risk of being public servant
16Relative risk of being public servant
17Occupational segregation
18Occupational segregation
19Main findings about Second Generation Outcomes
- Change of sectors of activity and a reduction in
the ethnic segmentation of the labour market when
compare to immigrants (gender segregation is
higher) - But persistence of an ethnic penalty for the
second generation higher unemployment,precarity,
subsidised jobs, queue process - Specific position of G2,5
- Proofs of discrimination
20Antidiscrimination policy
- Discrimination on the political agenda in
1998-1999, and reinforcement after the 2000
European Race directive - Two phases for anti-discrimination schemes
- GELD (hotline) and CODAC (local agencies)
1999-2003, but almost no cases brought to court - HALDE (2004-), a strategy on ligitation but no
law on equal opportunities - The misconception of the post-riots equal
opportunities Act of 2006.
21The French Law and the EU Race Directive
- Eu 2000 indirect discrimination shall be taken
to occur where an apparently neutral provision,
criterion or practice would put persons of a
racial or ethnic origin at a particular
disadvantage compared with other persons, unless
that provision, criterion or practice is
objectively justified by a legitimate aim and the
means of achieving that aim are appropriate and
necessary. - Formal equality more than effective equality or
equity - Statistics are not explicitly required to support
indirect discrimination analysis
22Contradictions between integration and
anti-discrimination paradigm
- The indirect discrimination concept and the
related action schemes are against the
traditional integrationnist strategy of
color-blindness (undifferentiation) . - ? No positive action and no collection of
statistics on ethnic and racial discrimination
are explicitly required - Individuals more than groups are targeted in the
integrationnist perspective - ? individual victims are targeted in the
French strategy (ligitation in court) and no
communities nor groups are considered - Territorial action schemes are preferred against
redistribution policies targeting immigrants or
minorities
23Consequences of this strategy
- No pre-defined categories victims are making
the case by themselves (Halde) - Situation testing is promoted as the main
approach for revealing discriminations (equal
opportunities act, 2006) - Extended use of proxys onomastic methods,
place of birth of the parents or deprived
neighbourhoods
- No understanding of systemic discriminations
- No analysis in terms of disparate impacts in
jobs or schools the implementation of the
concept of indirect discrimination is simply not
operational
24Categorizations controversies
- No race nor ethnic groups in statistics
- Foreigners (citizenship), immigrants (place of
birth and nationality) and, more recently,
second generation (native born from immigrants
parentage) - Post-MGIS survey controversy (1996-1999) How
to analyze integration - The return of the controversy in the context of
anti-discrimination strategy and debate around
diversity - High pressures from employers organizations and
some new minority lobbyists - The Trajectories and Origins survey
25Data protection and the controversy
- Data protection Act (1978, amended in 2004)
sensitive data that should not be collected
without special requirements (legal provisions,
public interest, ) - CNILs statement (july 2005/ march 2007) Is it
possible to collect ethnic or racial for
measuring diversity ? - Collection of data concerning ethnic or racial
background,real or alleged, for diversity
measurement purposes should be prohibited ()
since there is currently no national referentials
of ethno-racial typologies. No ethno-racial
indicators can be therefore produced and
disseminated by the national statistics for
providing reliable benchmarks to the employers
(indicators at national level or job areas
level). - Mainly a political choice rather than a pure
legal debate
26Legal, political and methodological issues behind
ethnic categorisation
- Identity politics and the Diversitys Buzz
a new approach of the french integration
model - Data protection and privacy confusions between
misuses and sensitive data - Struggling against racial and ethnic divisions
the universalist legacy - Different objectives recognition of identities,
targeting groups at risks of discrimination
and dealing with the memory of slavery and the
post-colonial debate - Moving identities reliability issues
27Collecting ethnic data an experimental survey
- A survey conducted at INED with 7 firms, 3
universities, 1327 respondants - A questionnaire testing three types of ethnic
identification - by a genealogical approach (parents and
grand-parents) - by self-identification in a list of different
origins (labels by regions or countries) - by self-identification in an ethno-racial list.
- An evaluation of these three methods, according
to different contexts (census, employment
registers, administrative files or scientific
surveys)
28Ethno-racial categories in the measuring
diversity survey
29Main results
- High level of acceptance of the genealogical or
the ancestry approach (more than 80) and a
significant hostility against ethno-racial
categorization - Immigrants and second generation are more
critical against ethno-racial categories - Arabs show the highest rate of hostility to any
method, Blacks express the higher degree of
acceptance differences in the experience of
ascription and expectations of passing,
incorporation of the republican credo of
undifferentiation
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31Ethno-racial categories
32Self-identification vs perception of third party
identification
33Reliability of 2nd Generation category vs 3rd
Generation
342nd Generation vs Ethno-racial classification
35Conclusion
- There is a 2nd Generation debate in France and
possibly an ethnicization and racialization of
this debate - Statistics are at the heart of this debate,
because they provide the references, but also
because they make visible the invisible - The so-called ethnic and racial statistics are
intrinsically heterogeneous, fuzzy and rooted in
each society where they attempt to grasp
primordial hierarchies - There will be an European choice to focus on
the 2nd Generation to deal with
antidiscrimination issues Labour Force Survey
(2008) and recommendations from UNECE