Kraaykamp, Notten & Bekhuis - Highbrow cultural participation of Turks and Moroccans in the Netherlands
Kraaykamp, G., Notten, N. & Bekhuis, H. (2015). Highbrow cultural participation of Turks and Moroccans in the Netherlands: Testing an identification and social network explanation. Cultural Trends, 24(4): 286-298.
Little is known about ethnic differences in highbrow cultural interests, because research on social differentiation in cultural participation has traditionally focused on educational or income inequalities. Employing data from the Netherlands’ Longitudinal Lifecourse Study 2010 the authors explored the extent to which educational attainment, national identification and social integration explain inequality in cultural participation among Turkish and Moroccan immigrants, and to what extent the effect of education was moderated by aspects of social identification and integration. Their results indicate that Turks and Moroccans, who identify more with the Netherlands and have a social network that includes larger numbers of Dutch and higher educated friends, are more active in the cultural realm. Most interestingly, we found that strong identification with Dutch society actually moderates the relationship between an immigrants’ educational attainment and their cultural participation: that is, highly educated people of Turkish and Moroccan descent, who strongly identify with the Netherlands, participated more in highbrow culture than their highly educated counterparts who identified less with the Netherlands.
Kraaykamp, Notten & Bekhuis “Highbrow cultural participation of Turks and Moroccans in the Netherlands: Testing an identification and social network explanation”