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Engaging Diversity's Underbelly: A Story from an Immigrant Parish Community
Author(s) -
Borg Mark B.
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
american journal of community psychology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.113
H-Index - 112
eISSN - 1573-2770
pISSN - 0091-0562
DOI - 10.1007/s10464-006-9014-y
Subject(s) - chinatown , sociology , immigration , oppression , power (physics) , gender studies , colonialism , politics , elitism , diversity (politics) , argument (complex analysis) , intervention (counseling) , political science , anthropology , law , psychology , medicine , physics , quantum mechanics , psychiatry
  This story explores an intervention conducted in a Catholic parish community in New York City. The intervention, conducted by the author and a Jesuit priest, focused on issues of unity and diversity among the various Chinese immigrant subgroups in the parish (primarily Cantonese‐ and Mandarin‐speakers). Issues of class, power, and a history of colonialism in the Catholic Church are explored as central to the relations among culturally diverse Chinese American community members and between the members and the practitioners and the church authority. The author especially focuses on how the dynamics that played out in the intervention reflected wider issues of economics, labor practices, and political elitism in the wider Chinatown community. A central part of the author's argument is about power relationships between this parish community and Chinatown and how these power relationships are embedded within broader racial and economic oppression within the United States.

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