How do ethnic religious organisations influence immigrants’ assimilation in host societies? This paper offers the first systematic answer to this question by focusing on Italian Catholic churches in the US between 1890 and 1920, when four million Italians moved to America, and anti-Catholic sentiments were widespread.
(joint with Tabellini M.)
Using newly digitised data from the Catholic directories, we exploit plausibly exogenous variation in the timing of arrival of Italian Catholic churches across US counties.
We find that Italian churches reduced the social assimilation of Italian immigrants, lowering intermarriage, residential integration, and naturalisation rates. We provide evidence that stronger coordination within the Italian community and natives' backlash and negative stereotyping can explain these effects.
Despite the reduction in Italians' social assimilation, Italian churches had ambiguous effects on immigrants' economic outcomes, and increased children's literacy and ability to speak English.
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