International Journal of Turkish Studies, Zväzok 12,Vydania 1–2University of Wisconsin, 2006 |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 3 z 22.
Strana 106
... less familiarity with the society of origin . New social relationships and networks as well as greater acceptance in the destination country also would make a return less likely . Hypothesis 3 : Increasing ethnic identification with the ...
... less familiarity with the society of origin . New social relationships and networks as well as greater acceptance in the destination country also would make a return less likely . Hypothesis 3 : Increasing ethnic identification with the ...
Strana 108
... less ethnic attention in the labor market and other areas of social interaction . Most of the 26 percent who are single are illegal and / or young migrants . More than 64 percent are married to Muslims , and 8 percent are / were married ...
... less ethnic attention in the labor market and other areas of social interaction . Most of the 26 percent who are single are illegal and / or young migrants . More than 64 percent are married to Muslims , and 8 percent are / were married ...
Strana 185
... less affluent and less educated and so less linguistically competent . For the elites , being " Turk " meant being modern , well educated and secular , willing to exclude Islam from the public sphere , to ignore the Ottoman legacy and ...
... less affluent and less educated and so less linguistically competent . For the elites , being " Turk " meant being modern , well educated and secular , willing to exclude Islam from the public sphere , to ignore the Ottoman legacy and ...
Obsah
ARTICLES | 1 |
Forging New Links in the Early Turkish Migration Chain | 15 |
The Emigration from the Ottoman | 29 |
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Časté výrazy a frázy
American Anatolia areas Armenians arrived assimilation Bayram became become began called census century Christian cities Column continue created cultural early economic emigration English established ethnic Europe European experience followed Foreign Greek Hazım History household identity important income individual institutions interest International Islam İstanbul Jews labor land language letters living Main majority manifest married migration mosque Muslim nature occupation official origin Ottoman Empire Peabody percent period person political population Press reason records region relations relationships relatives religion religious remained reported residence result significant social society sources stay Street subjects traditional Turkey Turkish immigrants Turks United University village wanted White women workers World York Yuva