Taiwanese Immigrants’ Perception of the Ethnic Hierarchy in Sweden
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Date
2024-01-26
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Abstract
Ethnic hierarchy tends to exist in a multi-ethnic society. Sweden has a long history of
receiving immigrants (Bentsen, 2021; Törngren, 2020). According to the Central
Statistics Bureau of Sweden’s (SCB) statistics at the end of 2021, foreign-born
immigrants (excluding those from Nordic countries) account for nearly 18% of the total
population in Sweden. This high percentage and the diversity of immigrants in the total
population raise the importance of ethnic hierarchy in Sweden. This research explores
how the ethnic hierarchy looks like in Sweden from Taiwanese immigrants’ perspective.
As a small ethnic group with allegedly privileged backgrounds, how they see the ethnic
hierarchy in Sweden and how they think about how the Swedes see the ethnic hierarchy
are the focus of this research. Moreover, how they position themselves in the ethnic
hierarchy is also included. Meanwhile, why they perceive the ethnic hierarchy in a
particular way may relate to their intergroup contact experience, political climate, and
how they think about the role of ‘blending in’ in Swedish society. According to
empirical findings from semi-structured interviews, the Taiwanese informants tend to
put Swedes, Europeans, and white people in the upper part of the hierarchy, then put
Asians in the middle, black people, Middle Easterners, and refugees at the bottom. To
explain the ethnic hierarchy, the informants commonly use several indicators related to
differences between groups or ethnicities and stereotypes of specific groups.
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Keywords
Ethnic Hierarchy, Taiwanese Immigrants, Sweden, stereotype, social distance