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Trends in fertility and intermarriage among immigrant populations in Western Europe as measures of integration

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 July 2008

D. A. Coleman
Affiliation:
Department of Applied Social Studies, University of Oxford

Summary

Demographic data on fertility and intermarriage are useful measures of integration and assimilation. This paper reviews trends in total fertility and intermarriage of foreign populations in Europe and compares them with the trends in fertility of the host population and the sending country. In almost all cases fertility has declined. The fertility of most European immigrant populations and of some West Indian and non-Muslim Asian populations has declined to a period level at or below that of the host society. Muslim populations from Turkey, North Africa and South Asia have shown the least decline. Intermarriage is proceeding faster than might be expected in immigrant populations which seemed in economic terms to be imperfectly integrated. Up to 40% of West Indians born in the UK, for example, appear to have white partners as do high proportions of young Maghrebians in France.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1994, Cambridge University Press

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