Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://t2-4.bsc.es/jspui/handle/123456789/63993
Title: Class and Ethnicity: Polish Migrant Workers in London, 1996-2006
Keywords: CHILDHOOD
EMPLOYMENT HISTORY
LIFE HISTORIES
EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND
EDUCATIONAL EXPECTATIONS
FATHER'S EMPLOYMENT HISTORY
MOTHER'S EMPLOYMENT HISTORY
LABOUR MOBILITY
LABOUR MIGRATION
LABOUR SUPPLY
LABOUR MARKET
JOB CHANGING
EMPLOYMENT
LEISURE TIME ACTIVITIES
SOCIAL ACTIVITIES (LEISURE)
WORKPLACE RELATIONS
SOCIAL NETWORKS
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
EMPLOYMENT ABROAD
LIVING ABROAD
EXPATRIATES
IMMIGRATION
INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
POPULATION MIGRATION
IMMIGRANTS
GROUP MIGRATION
MIGRANTS
CLANDESTINE EMPLOYMENT
INFORMAL ECONOMY
SOCIAL ATTITUDES
WORK ETHIC
SOCIAL VALUES
CULTURAL VALUES
SOCIAL BEHAVIOUR
INTERPERSONAL RELATIONS
COMMUNITY BEHAVIOUR
LIFE STYLES
SOCIAL ADJUSTMENT
ATTITUDE CHANGE
SOCIAL ALIENATION
SOCIAL INFLUENCE
SOCIAL INTEGRATION
WORK ATTITUDE
SOCIAL CLASS
SOCIAL STRATIFICATION
CLASS CONSCIOUSNESS
CLASS DIFFERENTIATION
HOUSING
IDENTITY
CULTURAL IDENTITY
NATIONAL IDENTITY
ETHNIC GROUPS
RACE RELATIONS
RACIAL PREJUDICE
PERSONAL IDENTITY
RELIGION
RELIGIOUS BELIEFS
RELIGIOUS BEHAVIOUR
1996-2006
England
Poland
Description: <P>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</P>
The study examines recent Polish migrations to London and the socio-cultural consequences for Poland and the UK as well as individual narratives about ethnicity, class, migration and multicultural Britain.<br> <br> This dataset consists of 57 qualitative, semi-structured face-to-face interviews with Polish nationals living in London and their friends and family in four locations in Poland. There is also one set of fieldwork notes conducted in Poland. Interviews were conducted in Polish and transcribed directly into English by the researcher.<br> <br> A majority of interviewees had been in London for no more than two years. Although some in the sample were very recent migrants, others had been living in the capital for almost a decade. Interviews were conducted across sections of age, education and occupational activity and the sample was weighted in order to be consistent with the more general statistical data gathered by the Home Office Workers Registration Scheme and the <i>Labour Force Survey</i>.<br> <br> The study asked interconnected questions, such as: in what terms do Polish migrant workers understand their socio-economic position within both London's market and in Poland, and in what ways can their understandings of both be analysed in terms of analytical distinctions between class and ethnicity? Also, what social and economic links did respondents maintain with relatives and friends in Poland?<br> <br> Further information is available from the ESRC <a href="http://www.esrc.ac.uk/my-esrc/grants/RES-000-22-1294/read" title="">Class and Ethnicity: Polish Migrant Workers in London</a> award page or the Surrey University <a href="http://www.surrey.ac.uk/Arts/CRONEM/polish/index.htm" title="Class and Ethnicity: Polish Migrant Workers in London project web page">Class and Ethnicity: Polish Migrant Workers in London</a> project web page.<br> <br>
<B>Main Topics</B>:<BR>
Migration, Polish, transnationalism, class<br>
URI: https://t2-4.bsc.es/jspui/handle/123456789/63993
Other Identifiers: 6056
10.5255/UKDA-SN-6056-1
http://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-6056-1
Appears in Collections:Cessda

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