Photo: Derek Owens, Unsplash

Evidence from exogamic partnerships

This project focuses on a specific aspect of social integration in Sweden - the forming of romantic relationships across different groups.

Over recent decades, there has been substantial immigration to many Western countries, including Sweden. This has resulted in increasingly multicultural societies and integration of immigrants has become prominent in the public debate.

While discussions have often centred around the labour market and schools, social integration is key for social cohesion. In this project, we focus on family relationships, which are a key marker of openness between different groups. We aim to study ethnic endogamy among different immigrant groups and natives and analyse how it is affected by segregation in neighbourhoods, schools and workplaces. We will describe how endogamy has developed over time, and analyse whether society has tended toward greater openness. We want to understand to what extent endogamy is the result of limited exposure to other groups, and to what extent it is caused by individuals' preferences for partners with similar cultural backgrounds.

We propose three work packages where we aim to answer these questions using detailed, geo-coded register data, as well as historical censuses. We will apply quantitative methods and descriptive and quasi-experimental approaches which will allow us to characterise changes over time and to conduct causal inference. We plan to work on these projects for three years. Our proposal is of high social relevance and will inform the understanding of the link between residential, school and workplace segregation and social integration.

IFFS is a partner in this project which has its base at Uppsala University, where you find PI Yaroslav Yakymovych.

Duration

2026–2029

Principal Investigator

Project members

Andreas Diemer PhD, Economic Geography

Funding

Swedish Research Council