Acculturation Experiences of College- Educated, North Sudanese Immigrant Women in Greensboro, North Carolina
Hudak, Glenn
The University of North Carolina at Greensboro
2020
196
Ph.D.
The University of North Carolina at Greensboro
2020
This qualitative case study examines acculturation experiences of seven college-educated North Sudanese women in Greensboro, North Carolina, in light of three acculturation theories and models: (a) John Berry's acculturation theory, (b) John Ogbu's cultural-ecological model, and (c) Alejandro Portes and Min Zhou's segmented assimilation theory. I chose these theories because they are among the most prominent theories dominating the immigrant acculturation literature. It was important for me to examine the acculturation experiences of the women I interviewed against these theories to see how the theories apply to the population I studied. The study also aimed at understanding how college-educated Sudanese women from the northern region of the Republic of Sudan speak about their identity upon settlement in the US and how their attachment to the homeland affect their acculturation experiences in the US. In this exploratory case study, I used semi-structured interviews to gather data. I used thematic analysis where I organized the data according to emerging patterns then used linear analysis and logic modeling to help organize and interpret the data. Major findings include the limitations of Berry's acculturation theory, Ogbu's cultural-ecological model, and Portes and Zhou's segmented assimilation theory. The identities of the women participants in this study are linked to their national, familial, social, and religious/spiritual affiliation. Drawing on Yosso's (2005) community cultural wealth model that includes: aspirational, familial, social, resistant, navigational, and linguisticforms of capital, I incorporate educational and religious/spiritual forms of capital that have been nurtured by my participants and their community.