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Теории миграции: от ассимиляции к транснационализму.
This paper explores the history of migration studies in the USA and in Europe, starting from Chicago school (1910 – 1920-s) and coming to current trends in this scientific field. I cover historical development of assimilation theory, the framework of the “Melting Pot”, then get to 1960-s and the rise of its criticism due to ethnocentric approach. I also show later developments of this concept into revised assimilation theory (Verba, Nee, Moravska), and into segmented assimilation concept (Portes, Rumbaut, Zhou, Waters). I see multiculturalism as a global trend that changed the way of thinking about ethnicity on the both continents and brought to life new theories, like transnationalism in European sociology (Glick Schiller, Foner, Vertovec). I also point at some contradictions of European and American approaches in migration theory in certain aspects, such as the effect of religiosity on integration success (Foner and Alba, Van Tubergen). Russian studies in this field that became numerous in the recent years are disregarded intentionally as they get covered in many other works, while the most recent trends of the international migration theory are not profoundly utilized in Russian sociology yet. Another reason is that they still lack broader theoretical perspective and stay more empirical.