Zusammenfassung
Angehörige stigmatisierter Gruppen leben oft mit der Erwartung, im täglichen Leben besonders kritisch beäugt, übersehen, unterschätzt, missverstanden und respektlos behandelt zu werden.
Diese Untersuchung entstand im Kontext eines internationalen Untersuchungsprojektes. Das Gespräch mit unseren MitarbeiterInnen Joshua Guetzkow, Hanna Herzog, Nissim Mizrachi, Elisa Reis und Graziella Silva bereicherte unser Denken vielfältig. Unser Beitrag profi tierte ferner von dem Einsatz der Mitglieder des Successful Society Program und der Unterstützung des Canadian Institute for Advanced Research ebenso wie von den Kommentaren von Kathleen Blee, Robert Castel, Anthony Jack, Carol Greenhouse und Andreas Wimmer. Die Untersuchung wurde in folgenden Kontexten vorgestellt, wobei die Reaktionen der Zuhörerschaft unser Denken erweiterten: Institut Marcel Mauss; Ecole des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales; Centre Maurice Halbwachs; Ecole Normale Supérieure; Observatoire Sociologique du Changement, Sciences Po; das Seminar „Cities are Back in Town“, Sciences Po; das Humanities Center, University of Pittsburg; die Departments of Sociology der Yale University, Boston University, Brandeis University und Brown University; die Faculty of Social Sciences and History der Diego Portales University, Santiago de Chile; die POLINE Konferenz über „Perceptions of Inequality“, Sciences Po (Paris, Mai 2011); Tagungen der Nordic Sociological Association, Oslo, August 2011; Adlerbert Research Foundation Jubilee Conference über „Creating Successful and Sustainable Societies“ (Göteburg, November 2011); Tagungen der Association for the Study of Ethnicity and Nationalism (London, März 2012). Die Finanzierung für die vergleichende Studie über die Formen des Umgangs mit Stigmatisierung und die Datenerfassung in Brasilien wurde durch einen „faculty grant“ und einen Weatherhead Initiative Grant des Weatherhead Center for International Affairs, Harvard University ermöglicht. Untersuchungen über afroamerikanische Formen des Umgangs mit Stigmatisierungen wurden durch einen Zuschuss der National Science Foundation (# 701542) finanziert. Die Untersuchungen über den Umgang mit Stigmatisierungen in Israel wurden durch einen Zuschuss der United States–Israel Binational Science Foundation finanziert. Michèle Lamont dankt dem Canadian Institute for Advanced Research für die großzügige Unterstützung. Wir danken Travis Clough für seine technische Unterstützung.
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Lamont, M., Welburn, J., Fleming, C. (2015). Formen des Umgangs mit Diskriminierung und soziale Resilienz im Neoliberalismus. In: Endreß, M., Maurer, A. (eds) Resilienz im Sozialen. Springer VS, Wiesbaden. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-05999-6_5
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