Scopul nostru este sprijinirea şi promovarea cercetării ştiinţifice şi facilitarea comunicării între cercetătorii români din întreaga lume.
As a general theme, my research is focused on individual and family evolution in various social contexts (influence of anomy on individuals, minorities versus majorities, immigrants and native born, educated versus uneducated, European countries and the US). I have done research on various immigrant and national groups such as Puerto Ricans and Mexicans in the US, Muslims and Gypsies in Europe, Hungarians and Romanians in Hungary and Romania.
Texas Tech University, Lubbock, .
E-mail: trimite un mesaj.
Pagina web a instituţiei: http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/crbradat/
Pagina web personala: http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/crbradat
Nascut(a) in: 1971
Interese: Demografie, Familie, Fertilitate, Migratie, Politici de populatie
Detalii:
Cercetarea mea se concentreaza pe evoluia individului si familiei in diferite contexte sociale (influenta anomiei asupra indivizilor, minoritati versus majoritati, imigranti si nativi, educati versus needucati, tari europene versus SUA). Am studiat diferite grupuri de imigranti si nativi cum ar fi Puerto Ricans si Mexicani in SUA, musulmani si Rroma in Europa, unguri si romani in Ungaria si Romania.
Details:
As a general theme, my research is focused on individual and family evolution in various social contexts (influence of anomy on individuals, minorities versus majorities, immigrants and native born, educated versus uneducated, European countries and the US). I have done research on various immigrant and national groups such as Puerto Ricans and Mexicans in the US, Muslims and Gypsies in Europe, Hungarians and Romanians in Hungary and Romania.
Publicații selectate:
* Cristina Brãdãţan, A. Popan, R. Melton, Trans-nationality as a fluid social identity, Routledge, Social Identities, 16(2), 2010.
* Cristina Bradatan, Sisteme de familie in tarile est europene, Sociologie romaneasca, 1-4, 2001.
* Cristina Bradatan, Cuisine and cultural identity in the Balkans, Anthropology of Eastern Europe Review, 21(1), 2003.
* Cristina Bradatan, Glenn Firebaugh, History, population policies, and fertility decline in Eastern Europe: A case study, Journal of Family History, 32(2), 2007.
* Laszlo Kulcsar, Cristina Bradatan, Politics without Frontiers: The impact of Hungarian domestic politics on the minority question in Romania, Communist and Post Communist Studies, 40, 2007.
* Cristina Bradatan, On Some 19th Century Theories of Suicide - Interpreting Suicide in an East European Country, International Journal of Comparative Sociology, 48 (5), 2007.
* Cristina Bradatan, Large, but adaptable? A successful population policy and its long term effects, Springer, Population Research and Policy Review, 28(4), 2009.
* Cristina Bradatan, Laszlo Kulcsar, Choosing between marriage and cohabitation: women’s first union patterns in Hungary , Journal of Comparative Family Studies, 39(4), 2008.