Top Banner
Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presentation given at Rice University October 18-19, 2009
19

Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presentation given at Rice University October 18-19, 2009.

Dec 19, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presentation given at Rice University October 18-19, 2009.

Margarita Mooney

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Presentation given at Rice University

October 18-19, 2009

Page 2: Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presentation given at Rice University October 18-19, 2009.

Images of Religion and Immigration in U.S., Quebec and France

Page 3: Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presentation given at Rice University October 18-19, 2009.

Cross-National Comparative and Ethnographic Research Design

• National level: immigration policies and religion in the public sphere in US, France and Quebec (Canada)

• Community level: interviews in Miami, Montreal and Paris with 1) Government leaders, 2) Haitian community leaders, 3) Catholic clergy and lay leaders

• Individual level: 15 months of ethnographic fieldwork and interviews at Haitian Catholic mission in each site

Page 4: Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presentation given at Rice University October 18-19, 2009.

Macro Level: Religion-State Relations

Open Market for Religion

and Generally Pro-Religious Society and Government

Assertive Secularism: Religion and

State are Competing

Comprehensive Doctrines

National Secularism:

Placing Limits on Immigrants’

Religious Practices and

Protecting National Identity

Page 5: Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presentation given at Rice University October 18-19, 2009.

Faith as Resilience

“Jesus Came With Us On The Boat”Incarnation and Inculturation of the Faith

“When you feel you are somebody, [that] you are important, you can move mountains, and that is faith.” Active Abandonment

“We Should Give without Expecting to Receive in Return.” Turning Passive Recipients into Givers

“Fight, life is not easy; don’t be afraid, Jesus is there.” Suffering as Redemptive

Page 6: Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presentation given at Rice University October 18-19, 2009.

Incarnation and Inculturation of the Faith

“Jesus came with us on the boat”

Page 7: Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presentation given at Rice University October 18-19, 2009.

“When you feel you are somebody, [that] you are important, you can move mountains, and that is faith.”

Active Abandonment

Page 8: Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presentation given at Rice University October 18-19, 2009.

“We should give without expecting to receive in return.” Transforming Passive Recipients into Givers

Page 9: Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presentation given at Rice University October 18-19, 2009.

“Fight, life is not easy; don’t be afraid, Jesus is there.” Suffering as Redemptive

Page 10: Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presentation given at Rice University October 18-19, 2009.

Religious Beliefs and Practices

“Jesus Came With Us On The Boat”Incarnation and Inculturation of the Faith

“When you feel you are somebody, [that] you are important, you can move mountains, and that is faith.” Active Abandonment

“We Should Give without Expecting to Receive in Return.” Turning Passive Recipients into Givers

“Fight, life is not easy; don’t be afraid, Jesus is there.” Suffering as Redemptive

Page 11: Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presentation given at Rice University October 18-19, 2009.

Mediating Institutions and Immigrant Assimilation

• Mediating institutions are necessary for successful immigrant assimilation because they: – Bridge gaps between the poor and the state through

advocacy and local social services– Create meaning, moral order and resilience that empower

the poor to pursue common interests• Toussaint Center (Miami), Bureau of Haitian Christian

Community (Montreal), Haiti Development (Paris)– Similar missions but different outcomes due to variation in

state response– Close links between social service center and religious

community builds trust

Page 12: Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presentation given at Rice University October 18-19, 2009.

Meso-Level: Haitians’ Mediating Institutions

“The church is the only place

people can trust.”

“The only reason churches would provide social

services is if the state is absent.”

Religion-State Consensual Differentiation

“The State doesn’t pay

any attention to our

associations.”

Assertive Secularism

Secular Nationalism

Page 13: Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presentation given at Rice University October 18-19, 2009.

Comparing Haitians’ Incorporation Outcomes

  Unem-ployed

HH Inc

<Poverty Line

<HS Degree

College Degree

Foreign-Born

Miami 17% $16K 45% 42% 2% 67%

Mont-real

32% $15K 63% 51% 4% 64%

Paris 28% n/a 52% 67% 13% 77%

Page 14: Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presentation given at Rice University October 18-19, 2009.

Micro-Level: Haitian Incorporation Outcomes

Enhanced socio-economic mobility

and strong religious identity among Haitians due, in

part, to cooperation between religious

mediating institutions and the

state

Blocked socioeconomic mobility among

Haitians and strong religious identity

clashes with secular culture

Hindered socioeconomic

mobility and strong religious identity

creates a barrier to symbolic

incorporation

Page 15: Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presentation given at Rice University October 18-19, 2009.

Book Website:

www.faithmakesuslive.com

Blog:

www.margaritamooney. blogspot.com

My Homepage:

www.margaritamooney.com

Page 16: Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presentation given at Rice University October 18-19, 2009.

Open Market for Religion and

Generally Pro-Religious Society and Government

Assertive Secularism: Religion

and State are Competing

Comprehensive Doctrines

Secular Nationalism: Placing Limits on

Immigrants’ Religious Practices

and Protecting National Identity

Macro Level: Religion-State Relations

Page 17: Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presentation given at Rice University October 18-19, 2009.

Three Contexts

Miami Paris Montreal125K, many boat

people; well-established

relationships between Catholic

Charities and local, state and national

governments

25K, class polarization;

long-established

Catholic social services

80K, class diversity and

hierarchy; 1960s Quiet Revolution

displaced dominant

Catholic Church

Page 18: Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presentation given at Rice University October 18-19, 2009.

New Research Questions on Religion and Migration from a Global Perspective

• Global Level: Religious Institutions Across Borders– Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism

• Cross-National Comparisons of Religion-State Interactions in the Public Square– Education, Hospitals, Military, and Prisons– Immigration Policy and Religious Diversity

• Micro-Level: Religion, Resilience and the Life Course

Page 19: Margarita Mooney University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presentation given at Rice University October 18-19, 2009.

Margarita Mooney

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Presentation given at Rice University

October 18-19, 2009