1980
DOI: 10.1177/144078338001600104
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From Race to Ethnicity

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Cited by 37 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Migrants are the least likely of the groups to be seen as poor perhaps partly because they are not seen as a homogeneous group and/or because a sense of exclusion and lack of sympathy is engendered by dominant views (cf. de Lepervanche, 1980). With the exception of Aborigines and migrants, the 1978 figures suggest somewhat less enthusiasm for recognising poverty, a point which will be taken up later.…”
Section: Views About Povertymentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Migrants are the least likely of the groups to be seen as poor perhaps partly because they are not seen as a homogeneous group and/or because a sense of exclusion and lack of sympathy is engendered by dominant views (cf. de Lepervanche, 1980). With the exception of Aborigines and migrants, the 1978 figures suggest somewhat less enthusiasm for recognising poverty, a point which will be taken up later.…”
Section: Views About Povertymentioning
confidence: 94%
“…2 There is much debate about the formal and substantive meanings of these terms. See for example, Cohcn and Bains, 1988;De Lepervanche, 1980;McCall ct al., 1985). Ultimately, the concepts have to be understood within their historical and political contexts.…”
Section: Racism and Cultures Of Resistancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Quoted in Stocking 1968, p.198 One reason that we hear little of problems of race today in sociology, is that it is increasingly being replaced by ethnicity as a popular, broad-based if flabby concept (de Lepervanche, 1980). But sociologists do not control the popular ideas with which the social world is understood, and race is still a widely used and powerful concept in our society.…”
Section: Marc Bloch the Historian's Craftmentioning
confidence: 99%