US Multicultural Experience: Food, Neighborhoods, Schools
Multiculturalism in the United States is not an abstract idea; it is a lived daily experience. People encounter cultural diversity when they buy groceries, choose where to live, and send children to school. These everyday moments shape tastes, social networks, and civic life. This article examines how food, neighborhoods, and schools transmit cultural difference into commonplace practices, backed by demographic context, concrete examples, and evidence of influence and tension.Demographic and historical contextThe United States has long experienced significant migration and internal movement, and in recent years about one in seven residents has been born abroad, with immigration continually broadening the…