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      • Evidence suggests that majority-group members typically tend to adopt only two of the four acculturation strategies commonly observed among immigrants or minority-group members: integration and separation. Integration involves maintaining majority-group culture while also adopting aspects of immigrant and minority-group cultures.
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  2. Oct 26, 2021 · Although research across several decades has examined the acculturation of individuals self-identifying as minority-group members, much less is known about how majority-group members acculturate in increasingly diverse societies.

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      Although research across several decades has examined the...

  3. Mar 1, 2023 · Do minority-group members welcome or reject that majority-group members adopt other cultures? Acculturation is commonly defined as a process of mutual accommodation. Yet, the acculturation of majority-group members has only recently received research attention.

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  4. May 13, 2022 · By contrast, Ferguson and Bornstein (2012, 2015) demonstrated that majority members (e.g., Jamaican youth) acculturate to specific geographically distant national cultures (e.g., USA) via indirect and intermittent exposure such as through food and media (i.e., remote-acculturation).

  5. Jul 19, 2021 · The present report suggests that personality traits may help explain how majority-group members acculturate and highlights avenues for future research.

  6. Sep 16, 2024 · At first glance, the idea that majority-group members acculturate towards the culture of immigrants and minority groups may seem counterintuitive. After all, they belong to the dominant culture in society and experience less pressure and practical incentives to change their culture.

  7. Research in the emerging field of majority-group acculturation has investigated the predictors that explain why some majority-group members adopt whereas others reject the cultures of...

  8. Current evidence suggests that majority-group accul-turation differs in important ways from minority-group acculturation. People self-identifying as members of majority groups tend to adopt only two of the four strate-gies commonly observed among those self-identifying as immigrants or minority-group members.

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