Advances in Psychology Logo Advances in Psychology Logo
Research Article | Special Issue: Acculturation Reimagined

The paradoxical effect of emotional acculturation in discriminatory contexts: School adjustment of immigrant minority youth

Alba Jasini ORCID, Anouck Cochez ORCID, & Batja Mesquita ORCID
https://doi.org/10.56296/aip00039
Published: August 21, 2025
Copyright: The authors (CC BY 4.0)

Jasini, A., Cochez, A., & Mesquita, B. (2025). The paradoxical effect of emotional acculturation in discriminatory contexts: School adjustment of immigrant minority youth. advances.in/psychology, 2, e229104. https://doi.org/10.56296/aip00039

Jasini, Alba, et al. "The paradoxical effect of emotional acculturation in discriminatory contexts: School adjustment of immigrant minority youth." advances.in/psychology, vol. 2, no. 1, 2025, e229104. https://doi.org/10.56296/aip00039.

Jasini, Alba, Anouck Cochez, and Batja Mesquita. 2025. "The paradoxical effect of emotional acculturation in discriminatory contexts: School adjustment of immigrant minority youth." advances.in/psychology 2 (1): e229104. https://doi.org/10.56296/aip00039.

Jasini A, Cochez A, Mesquita B. The paradoxical effect of emotional acculturation in discriminatory contexts: School adjustment of immigrant minority youth. advances.in/psychology. 2025;2(1):e229104. doi:10.56296/aip00039.

Jasini, A. et al. (2025) 'The paradoxical effect of emotional acculturation in discriminatory contexts: School adjustment of immigrant minority youth', advances.in/psychology, 2(1), e229104. Available at: https://doi.org/10.56296/aip00039.

Download .RIS Download .bib
When individuals of immigrant-descent engage in the majority culture, they acculturate. Most research has focused on explicit acculturation processes (i.e., acculturation orientations towards the majority and heritage cultures) and found their effects on adjustment to be modest and inconsistent. The current study sheds light on the understudied impact of implicit acculturation of emotions - i.e., the extent to which immigrant minorities adopt the majority culture emotion norms, without necessarily being aware that they do – on minorities’ adjustment over time. In addition, it considers the role of perceptions of discrimination in the acculturation context. A 2-year longitudinal study with 1588 minority in 68 secondary schools in Belgium revealed that emotional acculturation positively predicted minorities’ majority contact over time, yet it negatively predicted their school engagement over time (i.e., motivation, behavioral engagement, school compliance), particularly among immigrant-descent students who perceived high levels of discrimination at school. Therefore, emotional acculturation may have liabilities, in addition to benefits. Future research should further investigate the (context-dependent) impact of implicit acculturation processes, such as emotional acculturation. It is particularly important to understand under what circumstances, and why, implicit acculturation turns a potential benefit into a liability.

No citation data available yet.

Download PDF Back to article