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Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
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Longitudinal Changes in Acculturation for Immigrant Women From the Former Soviet Union

Arlene Michaels Miller

University of Illinois at Chicago, arlenem{at}uic.edu

Edward Wang

University of Illinois at Chicago

Laura A. Szalacha

University of Illinois at Chicago

Olga Sorokin

University of Illinois at Chicago

Most research on immigrant acculturation has been conducted with cross-sectional samples, using statistical designs that may not capture different trajectories for the components that contribute to this complex concept. The purpose of this study was to examine change over time in acculturation for 226 women from the former Soviet Union who had lived in the United States fewer than 8 years when recruited. Using self-report data from four annual waves, growth trajectories were examined in four components of acculturation (American behavior, Russian behavior, English language proficiency, and cultural generativity). Results indicate that these components changed at varying rates. Acculturation is a process with multiple distinct components that should be measured separately to obtain a full profile of change over time.

Key Words: acculturation • longitudinal studies • immigration • former Soviet Union

This version was published on May 1, 2009

Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, Vol. 40, No. 3, 400-415 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0022022108330987


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