83 results
Search Results
2. Skilled Migrants and Their Encounters with Care and Employment Regimes: Childcaring among Highly Skilled Female Migrants from Korea in Germany.
- Author
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Kwon, Jaok
- Subjects
EMIGRATION & immigration ,IMMIGRANTS ,LABOR market ,SKILLED labor ,EMPLOYMENT ,INSTITUTIONAL environment ,FEMALES ,ORGANIZATIONAL socialization - Abstract
By analysing the childcaring experiences of female skilled workers from South Korea (hereafter, Korea) in Germany, this paper maintains that the challenges in labour market participation for highly skilled women, and especially those with children, should be understood in the context of their encounters with similar and different care and employment regimes between their home and host countries. On the theoretical level, this research confirms the argument that the migration of highly skilled workers should be contextualized not from a neoclassical perspective in which the maximization of economic profits takes priority, but from an institutional point of view in which social and cultural norms, practices, and policies in both the home and host societies are taken into consideration. Specifically, through a series of in-depth interviews conducted with skilled female migrants from Korea, this paper highlights the significance of taking the function of similar and different caring and employment regimes into account in explaining the challenges faced by highly skilled migrant women in labour market participation. On the empirical level, this paper sheds light on the migration experiences of skilled women from Asia as well as the (dis)integration processes of newcomers from third-national countries in Germany, with a focus on female migrants from Korea. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Comparative analysis of immigration processes in Canada and Germany: empirical results from case studies in the health and IT sectors.
- Author
-
Annen, Silvia
- Subjects
EMIGRATION & immigration ,INFORMATION technology ,LABOR market - Abstract
Twelve qualitative case studies in German and Canadian hospitals and IT companies were used in this mixed-methods study analysing the labour market outcomes of immigrants. The reported case studies investigate the immigrants' recognition, integration process and the usability of foreign qualifications, skills and work experiences in the labour market. Furthermore, the strategies and rationales of employers and employees within the recruiting process are analysed. Here, the focus lies on the transferability and obstacles of cultural and social capital across country borders as well as the relevant framework conditions. This paper refers to Bourdieu's approach towards different types of capital as well as the rational choice theory. The results demonstrate that immigrants in both countries face more obstacles accessing the labour market within the health sector than within the IT sector. The context of the recruiting situation strongly affects the strategies and behaviour of the employers or the recruiters. Within these sector- and country-specific confines, individual factors determine the immigrants' labour market success. Furthermore, the sector and the country affect the relevance of each individual factor in the recruiting process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. European and National Migration Policy in the Shadow of Populism through the Lens of Administrative Measures: Germany and Italy Compared between 2015-2019.
- Author
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FRIEDERY, Réka and CRESCENZI, Andrea
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT policy ,HUMAN migrations ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,IMMIGRATION policy ,CRISIS management - Abstract
The paper explores a major conflict area, namely, national and the EU's immigration policy and investigates how the influx of migrants (mostly from the Middle East and North Africa - MENA region) into the EU has been used as a policy conflict ground. The article assesses the policy responses to (im)migration in Germany and Italy between 2015- 2019 as the changes made redirected the policy for future migration crisis. The aim of the article is to underline that the migration crisis of the EU spiraled into Members States' migration and populism crisis and into the challenges of the implementation of common EU migration policies and national policies. This is achieved by the analyses of administrative measures adopted in the most argued areas like asylum procedure, return policy and integration The paper argues that these crisis management measures were mostly restrictive, and not only aimed to handle the crisis but exposed a phenomenon: they not only intended to thwart the continuous growth of migration and populism but were in parts even favored by populists in the sense that they had the intention to curb immigration, too. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
5. 'The Politicisation Game': Strategic Interactions in the Contention Over TTIP in Germany.
- Author
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Gheyle, Niels and Rone, Julia
- Subjects
PRACTICAL politics ,GLOBALIZATION ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
As the third-largest exporting country in the world, Germany is a clear beneficiary and proponent of free trade. Few, therefore, expected the magnitude of contention that emerged within Germany during the negotiations between the EU and the United States for a transatlantic trade deal (TTIP). This paper explores the politicisation process of TTIP within the context of the broader transformations of German politics including not only the entry of new issues and new players in the electoral and protest arenas but also the increased hybridisation of forms of protest. Theoretically, we draw on the 'Players and Arenas' framework to put forward a sequential, strategic interactionist approach to the unfolding process of politicisation, in which various types of players face dilemmas when interacting with each other over time. Applying this analytical framework to the politicisation of TTIP in Germany, we reveal previously overlooked players, interactions and dilemmas, while opening up multiple opportunities for empirical analysis of cases beyond this area. We show how the politicisation of TTIP brought about an important intensification of relations between Germany's protest and electoral arenas, and confronted all players involved with choices with long-lasting consequences for both mobilisation and coalition building dynamics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. 'What about it is unclear? I mean I was born here:' Ungeklärte Staatsangehörigkeit and the (re-)production of de facto statelessness in Germany.
- Author
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Farinha, Margarida
- Subjects
CITIZENSHIP ,STATELESSNESS ,NATURALIZATION ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
This paper examines the administrative category 'ungeklärte Staatsangehörigkeit' ('unclear nationality') and its implications for citizenship rights in Germany. An unclear nationality represents a de facto statelessness but does not concede the rights established for de jure stateless people. It impedes naturalization in Germany and complicates access to a travel document and settlement permit. The paper analyses the (re-)production of unclear nationality and traces its effects on the life of a woman born in Germany with an unclear nationality since birth. Her experiences disclose the difficulty of navigating the German bureaucratic system and its discretionary power. Her experiences also reveal how a state of limbo is perpetuated over generations, confining individuals in a territory whose bureaucratic apparatus views them as foreign. Unclear nationality thus functions as a technology of exclusion: by placing the person in a yet-to-be determined nationality, it interpellates them not as subjects of rights but objects of clarification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Mathematics teaching for migrant students in German schools—How do teachers respond to their students' diverse needs?
- Author
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Lüssenhop, Maike and Kaiser, Gabriele
- Subjects
LEARNING ,MATHEMATICS education ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,DIVERSITY in education ,MULTILINGUALISM - Abstract
The increase in international migration and the global number of students learning mathematics through a language other than their home language makes migrants' educational pathways a particularly urgent issue. The current paper focuses on the German context as Germany is currently one of the major immigration countries in the Western context. Because German is widely perceived as the language of opportunity for migrants in the German school system, it is overwhelmingly the selected language of learning and teaching in the broader school system and within migrant classes. The article is based on qualitative interviews with mathematics teachers teaching migrant classes; and the data analysis followed the Grounded theory tradition. The central phenomenon that seemed to preoccupy all teachers was how to adapt mathematics teaching to the language- and mathematics-related diversity of their students while simultaneously helping them to transfer smoothly to the mainstream classes or pass the final examinations successfully. Due to the lack of institutional support for teaching in migrant classes and problems in dealing with multilingualism and mathematics-related diversity in mathematics lessons, they were generally frustrated with the situation despite being strongly motivated at first. Using three examples from the data, we illustrate teachers' strategies in relation to multilingualism and mathematics-related diversity. Overall, the study points to the necessity of supporting teachers in their mathematical practices in migrant classes to contribute to more inclusive mathematics education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. The role of social networks for combating COVID-19 pandemic: a study with reference to the Chinese new immigrants in Germany.
- Author
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Zhu, Qian, Lu, Ming, and Qin, Yanjia
- Subjects
CHINESE people ,COVID-19 pandemic ,SOCIAL network theory ,OVERSEAS Chinese ,SOCIAL networks ,DISASTER relief ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,CHARITABLE giving - Abstract
Social network theories are used extensively to analyze the international migration of Chinese to overseas regions in the era of Market Economy Reform since 1978. Attention is paid especially on the role of social networks among overseas Chinese on disaster relief in China. Focusing on the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, this paper investigates how social networks work as a crucial mechanism through which Chinese immigrants in Germany initiated and delivered monetary and material donations to China in early 2020 and then organized self-help in their everyday lives in Germany in late 2020. Different from previous studies, this paper scrutinizes social networks for disaster relief on the macro, meso, and micro levels. Multi-site ethnographic fieldwork in China and Germany combined with online and offline data collected from focus group sessions, interviews with individuals, participant observations, surveys, analysis of news reports on the pandemic, and analysis on relevant policies are utilized comprehensively to collect data on the three levels. This research discovers that internet tools – represented by WeChat – have integrated tightly into the traditional social networks of Chinese immigrants and consolidated the cultural cohesion from overseas Chinese to their connections in China. This paper aims at contributing to present studies on Chinese new immigrants, social network, and disaster management theories with an updated ethnographic case on the COVID-19 pandemic from Germany. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Neoliberalizam njemačkih demokršćanskih stranaka u politici državljanstva od 1990. do danas.
- Author
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Mađarević, Elizabeta
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT policy ,RELIGIOUS groups ,POLITICAL refugees ,LABOR supply ,POLITICAL parties ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,COALITION governments ,ETHNICITY - Abstract
Copyright of Obnovljeni zivot is the property of University of Zagreb, Society of Jesus and Faculty of Philosophy & Religious Studies and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. GEORGIA – GERMANY: SOCIAL-ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF LABOR MIGRATION.
- Author
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Giuli, Giguashvili and Tamar, Makasarashvili
- Subjects
LABOR mobility ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,RESEARCH personnel ,LEGALIZATION - Abstract
Revealing the factors causing international labor migration, bringing it into the legal framework, and evaluating the socio-economic consequences are the areas of interest for many researchers around the world. Attempts to create theories of labor migration to explain the causes and consequences of migration often end up with contradictory conclusions, which are explained by the complex nature of migration processes and the influence of political processes on it. The paper analyzes the socio-economic consequences of the legalization of migration processes between Georgia and Germany and the prospects for further relations development between the countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Age, mobility and creative output: prominent authors in 18th and 19th century Germany.
- Author
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O'Hagan, John
- Subjects
CREATIVE thinking ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,PUBLISHING - Abstract
This paper studies the movement of creative writers in the light of changes in German economic and political structures from the early 18
th to the early 20th century. For this, we have constructed from various sources a yearly data set on all the writers in German listed in the Encyclopedia Britannica and born in the 18th and 19th centuries. The key findings are that, first, there was extensive long-term movment, initially to small university towns and later to large cities, especially Berlin and Munich. As such the notion of creative clusters is not recent but dates back centuries. Second, migration and yearly publication output are both strongly linked to age. The study is broken into three subperiods, 1700–1785, 1786–1839 and 1840–1899, and what is striking perhaps is that these age relationships followed very similar patterns in all these subperiods. Third, some of the causal factors for this are posited, for futher research, such as changes in publishing and transport facilities, employment opportunities and the attractions of being in a lively creative milieu. Useful lessons for present-day policy regarding the extent of and motivation for clustering, and their linkage to age, can be applied. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. 30 Years of East-West Migration in Germany: A Synthesis of the Literature and Potential Directions for Future Research.
- Author
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Rosenbaum-Feldbrügge, Matthias, Stawarz, Nico, and Sander, Nikola
- Subjects
INTERNAL migration ,HUMAN geography ,RETURN migrants ,EVIDENCE gaps ,GERMAN Unification, 1990 ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,MIGRATIONS of nations - Abstract
The reunification of the socialist German Democratic Republic and the capitalist Federal Republic of Germany presents a unique setting for studying the impact of socio-economic and political change on migration. This paper provides a comprehensive review of the interdisciplinary literature on migration between East and West Germany since reunification, conducted in disciplines such as economics, demography, sociology, and human geography. We synthesise the literature with regard to data-related challenges as well as individual and contextual determinants of migration. We clarify some misinterpretations and discrepancies in previous studies, identify research gaps, and suggest directions for future research. Our review demonstrates that East-West migration mainly occurred in line with what could have been expected based on migration theory with regard to migrants' sex, age, education, labour market position, and social networks. West-East migration, in contrast, was strongly affected by return migrants who often stated non-occupational motives for moving. On the contextual level, differences in wages are better able to explain East-West migration over time than differences in unemployment rates. West-East migration, however, cannot be explained well with such macroeconomic models. This paper contributes a point of reference for future research on this topic, as well as on internal migration and socio-economic disparities in general. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Greek Gastarbeiter in Germany and European Expatriates from Greece: Diaspora Interactions between Immigrants and Neo-Immigrants.
- Author
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Tseligka, Eleni D.
- Subjects
EMIGRATION & immigration ,NONCITIZENS ,IMMIGRANTS ,FOREIGN workers - Abstract
Between 1953 and 1973, emigration depleted the Modern Greek state by roughly one fifth of its total population. A significant number of those migrants relocated to Germany, which since 1960, has been home to a sizeable community of former Gastarbeiter (guest-workers) and their descendants. Following three decades of European Integration and relative prosperity, the 2009 Greek sovereign debt crisis initiated a new wave of Greek emigration, analogous, yet different to that of the postwar era. Germany remains an attractive destination for Greek expatriates, but in contrast to guest-workers from the 1960s, "neo-migrants" are typically skilled or highlyskilled persons who relocate individually. This paper examines the qualitative attributes of Greek expatriates and "neo-migrants" in Germany and compares them to those of former guest-workers; furthermore, this paper compares the narratives of Gastarbeiter to those of European expatriates. Finally, the perceptions of Greek expatriates for the established Greek community in Germany are looked into, as well as the individual and collective efforts of the Greek community and institutions to help and ease their socioeconomic integration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
14. Bildungsversprechen, Integration und Widerständigkeit im Migrationskontext.
- Author
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Çitlak, Banu
- Subjects
YOUNG adults ,GOAL (Psychology) ,SOCIAL mobility ,BINARY codes ,IMMIGRANT families ,LABOR market ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
The paper examines the notion of integration through formal education by focusing on immigrant families in Germany. The article focuses on the predominant discourse that persists in reiterating the binary code of the formal education system, which encompasses educational success or failure as a synonym for the migration policy code of integration or disintegration. This equation is made even stronger by a meritocratic philosophy that doesn't consider the othering processes and ignores all the restrictions that migrant youth face in education, the labour market, and the market for vocational training. The ambiguity between the actual possibilities and the attainable goals, embodied in the predominant imperative of “social mobility through education”, creates resistance within the group of immigrant parents and youth. The article argues that under these conditions, the family system may provide alternative ways of recognition for young people, which can be taken as a counter-concept with its own values that reject media-mediated narratives of integration and their symbolic representatives. By utilizing empirical data, the article provides insight into the past and present experiences of family members and the factors that contribute to the resistance of immigrant families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Contextualizing small towns – trends of demographic spatial development in Germany 1961–2018.
- Author
-
Wolff, Manuel, Haase, Annegret, and Leibert, Tim
- Subjects
SMALL cities ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,POPULATION differentiation ,RURAL geography - Abstract
For the past ten years, the growth debate has been urban-centric, at least in Germany, while rural areas have been largely associated with depopulation. Despite their importance, small towns fall into a systematic perception gap in scientific and planning discourses. Against this background, this paper applies a threefold conceptualization of scalar relations paying analytical attention to (1) population trajectories, (2) the relation of spatial proximity and development, and (3) the influence of international migration on population development. Covering the period 1961–2018, this paper shows that despite a current demographic respite due to increased international migration, many small towns will continue to face the long-term consequences of population decline. This is accompanied by an increasing spatial differentiation of population growth rates. The relation between proximity to large centres and population growth is weakening, giving rise to other factors, e.g. residential amenities and competition between small and medium-sized towns. Based on this quantitative assessment, we conclude that small towns are the most dynamic settlement type in Germany and, at the same time, extremely heterogeneous in terms of trajectories and underlying driving factors. We also discuss conceptual aspects regarding process-understanding, terms, categories, and tools to analytically grasp the complexity of small towns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Self-Construction in Immigration – I-Positioning through Tensional Dialogues to Powerful Foreign and Native Voices.
- Author
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Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer Lado
- Subjects
COLLECTIVE representation ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,HUMAN behavior ,SELF - Abstract
This paper explores proculturative semiotic dynamics underlying self-construction in emigration that reveals various forms of the self's positioning through the processes of relating to the native and foreign socio-cultural environments. The self is conceptualised as the heterogeneous entirety of voices and self-related positions which are hierarchically organised. Hierarchical organisation implies the dominance of certain voices and I-positions at the expense of silencing others. Moreover, external societal voices promote hegemonic social representations which are represented as promoter I-positions/signs in the self-structures and have the power to regulate individuals' mental activity. Therefore, it is argued that selves' relations to the environment are not always symmetrically dialogical. The compelling power of hierarchically ordered external meaning systems that are conceptualised as "objective culture" is illustrated in the best manner when a person occurs in emigration where the native organisation of voices and I-positions is being semiotically ruptured due to the meeting with a foreign configuration of a hierarchy of external I-positions and gets "attacked" by alien promoter signs. External promoter voices and I-positions have the power to take the dominant position and establish asymmetric relations with other self-related elements. They can significantly influence intra-psychological negotiations by vocalising hegemonic social representations which exist in any community. The case study of a Georgian emigrant's living in Germany vividly reveals the wave of self-transformations which she undergoes after the liberation from the pressure of native promoter signs and engagement with the German ones. Specific microgenetic experiences leading to the transformations at the ontogenetic level are highlighted. Symmetric and asymmetric forms of communication are conceived as particular instances of relating. This paper vividly reveals the significance of the exploration of the forms of dynamic relations between various components of the self and socio-cultural environment and entailing intra-psychic and external negotiations for better understanding of the nature of humans' epigenetic development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Transformationen und Klassifikationen migrantischer Mobilität im Kontext der Gastarbeitermigration.
- Author
-
PFAFFENTHALER, MANFRED
- Subjects
COUNTRY of origin (Immigrants) ,MIGRANT labor ,TRAFFIC safety ,ROAD safety measures ,FOREIGN workers ,EDUCATIONAL mobility ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
Copyright of Movements: Journal für kritische Migrations & Grenzregimeforschung is the property of Movements and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
18. Employment effects of immigration to Germany in the period of migration policy liberalization, 2005–2018.
- Author
-
Erol, Isil and Unal, Umut
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT statistics ,EMPLOYMENT ,POLITICAL refugees ,LABOR market ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,FREE trade ,EMPLOYMENT policy - Abstract
Germany has undergone a significant migration policy shift since the early 2000s. This paper examines the total employment effect of immigration during the liberalization of migration policies from 2005 to 2018 using a regional approach. A set of methods, along with static and dynamic macro-econometric models, were applied on a balanced panel formed by a unique and first-hand-collected data for 156 statistical regions based on the definition of the German Federal Employment Agency. We find suggestive evidence that there has been a significant adverse impact of new immigrants on the overall employment rate, and this negative effect is substantially larger than those reported in previous studies on the employment effect of immigration in the German labor market. In a further step, we divide our sample into two subsamples to capture the employment effect of the massive humanitarian inflows that began in 2015. Our results indicate that, in addition to the new immigrants' lower rate of integration into the local labor markets, a sudden influx of asylum seekers may possibly lead to a substantial fall in the employment rates, because asylum seekers are not immediately allowed to work in the country. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. On Subjectivity and the Relationship with the Other: Qualitative Results of an Interview‐Study with 50 Young Muslims.
- Author
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Kaiser, Paul Maximilian, Barth, Lena, Tuncel Langbehn, Gonca, Ruettner, Barbara, and Goetzmann, Lutz
- Subjects
MUSLIMS ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,SUBJECTIVITY ,TURKS ,CULTURAL property - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the relationship between subjectivity and the other during the course of integration among 50 young Muslims of dual national heritage in Germany. The largest group of migrants within Germany are people of Turkish and Kurdish origin. During the summer and autumn of 2018, we interviewed 50 individuals of both genders aged between 18 and 25. The interviews were carried out and evaluated in North Germany. We saw that the 'feeling of being held', 'being‐able‐to‐process‐(negative)‐experiences' and 'to take responsibility for oneself and other' are characteristics of well‐educated young Muslims. Those who feel at home in their Turkish family or in the Islamic religion are able to process positive and negative experiences and present more (mature) super‐ego structures. This allows them to be able to deal with the challenges of migration and integration. Based on the data, we developed the 'Triadic Model of Integration' within the Lacanian L‐Scheme of Subjectivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Dynamic Effects of Co-Ethnic Networks on Immigrants' Economic Success.
- Author
-
Battisti, Michele, Peri, Giovanni, and Romiti, Agnese
- Subjects
IMMIGRANTS ,PANEL analysis ,CAPITAL investments ,HUMAN capital ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,REFUGEES - Abstract
In this paper we investigate how co-ethnic networks affect the economic success of immigrants. Using longitudinal data of immigrants in Germany and including a large set of fixed effects and pre-migration controls to address the possible endogeneity of initial location, we find that immigrants in districts with larger co-ethnic networks are more likely to be employed soon after arrival. This advantage fades after four years, as migrants located in places with smaller co-ethnic networks catch up due to greater human capital investments. These effects appear stronger for lower-skilled immigrants, as well as for refugees and ethnic Germans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Verwaltungsverflechtung als „missing link“ der Föderalismusforschung: Administrative Bewältigung der Flüchtlingskrise im deutschen Mehrebenensystem.
- Author
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Bogumil, Jörg and Kuhlmann, Sabine
- Subjects
FEDERAL government ,COVID-19 pandemic ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,CRISIS management ,MODERNIZATION (Social science) ,REFUGEES ,LAW enforcement - Abstract
Copyright of Der Moderne Staat is the property of Verlag Barbara Budrich GmbH and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Natives and migrants in home production: the case of Germany.
- Author
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Forlani, Emanuele, Lodigiani, Elisabetta, and Mendolicchio, Concetta
- Subjects
LABOR supply ,LABOR mobility ,WOMEN immigrants ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,IMMIGRANTS ,LABOR market ,INDIGENOUS women ,INFORMATION sharing - Abstract
In this paper, we assess the impact of international migration and the induced homecare service labor supply shock on fertility decisions and the labor supply of native females in Germany. Specifically, we consider the individual data of native women from the German Socio-Economic Panel and merge them with data on the share of female immigrants and other regional labor market characteristics. We provide evidence that areas with a high share of female immigrants are more likely to provide a larger amount of services related to household care and lower prices for such services. By controlling for unobserved individual characteristics, we find that an increase at the local level in the share of female immigrants positively affects the probability of having a child, induces women to work longer hours (intensive margin of labor supply) and reduces the number of hours they spend performing family duties (intensive margin of home production). The negative change in household working hours supports the validity of our results. These effects become stronger for (medium-) skilled women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Reimagining German identity through the politics of history: changing interpretations of German past migrations during the 'Refugee crisis', 2015/2016.
- Author
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Perron, Catherine
- Subjects
EMIGRATION & immigration ,MEMORY ,DEPORTATION ,REFUGEES ,GERMAN history - Abstract
This paper brings memory and migration studies together. It focuses on the way the past was used in the context of the 'refugee crisis' in Germany in 2015/2016. The analysis concentrates on how politicians and journalists used the memory of Germans' own migrations to legitimise rhetorically the political decision to open the borders and let more than a million people into the country, as well as to call for a welcoming attitude (Willkommenskultur) towards the refugees. It shows how, by doing so, they have contributed to the reframing of one of the founding identity narratives of the FRG, namely the one about 'flight and expulsion', and thus helped to redraw Germany's identity boundaries in a more inclusive way. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Immigration Threat, Partisanship, and Democratic Citizenship: Evidence from the US, UK, and Germany.
- Author
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Goodman, Sara Wallace
- Subjects
PARTISANSHIP ,CITIZENSHIP ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,PUBLIC opinion ,FRAMES (Social sciences) ,CIVIL society - Abstract
Politicians and media frequently invoke immigration threats to shape public opinion. But how do outgroup threat frames affect norms of citizenship, including behavior, liberal value commitments, and national belonging? This paper presents evidence from an embedded vignette survey experiment in three immigrant-receiving societies: United States, United Kingdom, and Germany. I find immigration threats are filtered through partisanship in polarized settings, and asymmetrically affect norms of "good citizenship" among individuals on the partisan left. However, we see variation within this group: Democrats (US) de-value norms of behavior, like voting and being informed, while Labor supports (UK) repudiate liberal norms like tolerance and rally around national belonging. By contrast, in Germany, we observe more consensus in citizenship norm responses. The strong effect of immigration threat framing on the partisan left brings our attention to the strategic use of immigration discourse to move traditionally sympathetic citizens away from democratic civic ideals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Coming of Age: Migrant Economies and Social Policies in Germany.
- Author
-
Hillmann, Felicitas
- Subjects
- *
COMING of age , *EMPLOYMENT policy , *SOCIAL policy , *NONPROFIT sector , *IMMIGRANTS , *EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
This paper analyzes the policies for migrant economies as part of broader social and labor market in Germany. It points out that the current fragmented and contradictory policy action can be identified as an outcome of former ambiguities and the delegation of responsibilities within a complex governance grid. Accordingly, its focus is on the inter-related dynamics of policy interventions, knowledge production and the impact of migrant agency within cities. The paper gives a condensed overview on theory and background of migrant economies, pointing to de facto barriers that persist until today. It then concentrates on the way labor market policies in respect of migration were framed in public discourse. Its empirical focus is on the web of policies and instruments that have been directed towards migrant entrepreneurship. Here, in-built ambiguities of all actions are identified as a general feature of German labor market policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Cross-border Families and the Movement Constraints Along the Polish-German Borderland During the COVID-19 Pandemic.
- Author
-
GIRYN-BOUDY, Maria
- Subjects
FAMILIES ,BORDER crossing ,COVID-19 pandemic ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
Copyright of Political Science Review / Przegląd Politologiczny is the property of Faculty of Political Science & Journalism, Adam Mickiewicz University and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Firm Heterogeneity and the Impact of Immigration: Evidence from German Establishments.
- Author
-
Brinatti, Agostina and Morales, Nicolas
- Subjects
EMIGRATION & immigration ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,IMMIGRANTS ,LABOR market ,EMPLOYERS - Abstract
We use a detailed establishment-level dataset from Germany to document a new dimension of firm heterogeneity: large firms spend a higher share of their wage bill on immigrants than small firms. We show analytically that ignoring this heterogeneity in the immigrant share leads to biased estimates of the welfare gains from immigration. To do so, we set up and estimate a model where heterogeneous firms choose their immigrant share and then use it to quantify the welfare effects of an increase in the number of immigrants in Germany. Two new adjustment mechanisms arise under firm heterogeneity. First, native workers reallocate across firms, which mitigates the competition effect between immigrants and natives in the labor market. Second, the gains are largely concentrated among the largest and most productive employers, which induces an additional aggregate productivity gain. If we ignore the heterogeneity in the immigrant share across firms, we would underestimate the welfare gains of native workers by 11%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
28. Barriers and drivers to COVID-19 vaccination among the migrant and non-migrant population in Germany, 2021.
- Author
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Wulkotte, Elisa, Schmid-Küpke, Nora, Bozorgmehr, Kayvan, Razum, Oliver, Wichmann, Ole, and Neufeind, Julia
- Subjects
HEALTH services accessibility ,IMMUNIZATION ,IMMIGRANTS ,CROSS-sectional method ,STATISTICAL models ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,RESEARCH funding ,T-test (Statistics) ,POPULATION health ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,INTERVIEWING ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,HEALTH policy ,COVID-19 vaccines ,CONFIDENCE ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,ODDS ratio ,VACCINATION coverage ,INTENTION ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,PUBLIC health ,DATA analysis software ,COMMUNICATION barriers - Abstract
Background During the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, immunization programmes struggled to reach all population groups equally. While migrant groups face multiple barriers to health systems, including vaccination, little is known about their vaccine uptake. Methods We conducted a cross-sectional telephone survey on adults with and without migration history in Germany to investigate barriers and drivers to COVID-19 vaccination (11 April 2021 to 18 December 2021). Interviews were conducted in six languages. We used logistic regression models and a mediation model to analyze the association between migration history and vaccine uptake. Furthermore, we determined the effect of psychological determinants (5C model) on vaccine uptake. Results The survey comprised 2039 individuals, including 1015 with migration history. Of these, 448 were interviews conducted in languages other than German. Individuals with migration history had a significantly lower vaccine uptake but, while still unvaccinated, had a higher intention to get vaccinated (P = 0.015) compared with those without migration history. The association between migration history and vaccine uptake was no longer significant when other factors were included in the regression model (odds ratio = 0.9; 95% confidence interval: 0.57–1.47). Socio-economic index, language skills and discrimination experience fully mediated this association. Among the psychological determinants, 'higher confidence' and 'higher collective responsibility' increased the chance of individuals with migration history to be vaccinated. Conclusion Migration history alone cannot explain vaccine uptake; socio-economic index, language skills and discrimination experiences need to be considered. To achieve vaccine equity, future public health policy should aim to reduce relevant barriers through tailored interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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29. Refugee Labor Market Access Increases Support for Immigration.
- Author
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Hager, Anselm, Hilbig, Hanno, and Riaz, Sascha
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SOCIAL attitudes ,PUBLIC opinion ,LABOR market ,EMPLOYMENT statistics ,REFUGEES ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,REFUGEE children ,CORRUPT practices in elections - Abstract
Does the economic integration of refugees affect public attitudes toward migration? We assess this pertinent question by examining a policy change in Germany, where the government significantly eased labor market access for refugees in the majority of the country. Using administrative employment data, we show that the policy led to a substantial increase in refugee employment, while natives' wages and employment rates remained unaffected. The policy also had a positive effect on natives' attitudes toward migration. Voters exposed to more refugees in the labor market were two percentage points more likely to vote for pro-migration parties across both state and federal elections. Additional survey analyses suggest that our results are driven by positive native–refugee interactions in the workplace. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. Aktueller Stand der Interkulturellen Öffnung der psychiatrischpsychotherapeutischen Versorgung von Kindern und Jugendlichen aus Sicht von Fachkräften / The Current Status of the Intercultural Opening of the Psychiatric-Psychotherapeutic Care for Children and Adolescents from the Perspective of Professionals
- Author
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Garbade, Maike, Sachser, Cedric, and Pfeiffer, Elisa
- Subjects
MEDICAL personnel ,CORE competencies ,TRAINING needs ,CHILD care ,COMMUNICATION barriers ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,PSYCHIATRIC nursing - Abstract
Copyright of Praxis der Kinderpsychologie und Kinderpsychiatrie is the property of Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht GmbH & Co. KG and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The role of sociodemographic, psychosocial, and behavioral factors in the use of preventive healthcare services in children and adolescents: results of the KiGGS Wave 2 study.
- Author
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Bammert, Philip, Schüttig, Wiebke, Iashchenko, Iryna, Spallek, Jacob, Rattay, Petra, Schneider, Sven, Richter, Matthias, Pischke, Claudia R, Dragano, Nico, and Sundmacher, Leonie
- Subjects
CHILD services ,VACCINATION status ,VACCINATION ,TEENAGERS ,MARITAL status ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
Background: In Germany, various preventive services are offered to children and adolescents. These include regular standardized examinations (so called U/J examinations) and several vaccinations. Although strongly recommended, most of them are not mandatory. Our aim is to identify factors associated with the use of U/J examinations and vaccination against diphtheria, hepatitis B, Hib, pertussis, polio, and tetanus. While previous research has focused on sociodemographic factors, we also include socioeconomic, behavioral, and psychosocial factors. Methods: We analyzed cross-sectional data from 15,023 participants (aged 0–17 years) of the nationwide representative KiGGS Wave 2 Survey. Participation in U/J examinations was assessed using a questionnaire, filled out by participants and/or their parents. Information on vaccination status was drawn from the participants' vaccination booklets. To identify relevant determinants for the use of preventive examinations and vaccinations, unadjusted and adjusted logistic regression models were employed with up to 16 different independent variables. Results: Various independent variables showed an association with the use of preventive services. Higher socioeconomic status, absence of migration background, and lower household size were associated with significantly higher utilization of U examinations. Parents' marital status, area of residence, behavioral and psychosocial factors yielded insignificant results for most U/J examinations. Higher vaccination rates were found for children with no migration background, with residence in eastern Germany, lower household size, and with married parents. Conclusion: This study attempted to depict the influence of sociodemographic, psychosocial, and behavioral factors on the use of several preventive services. Our results indicate that predominantly sociodemographic variables influence the use of preventive services. Further efforts should be made to investigate the interplay of different determinants of healthcare use in children and adolescents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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32. 'With a little help from my educated friends': revisiting the role of social capital for immigrants' labour market integration in Germany.
- Author
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Rüdel, Julia and Steinmann, Jan-Philip
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LABOR market ,SOCIAL capital ,SOCIAL contact ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,IMMIGRANTS ,CULTURAL pluralism ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
This article examines the link between immigrants' social capital and their labour market access (employment) and success (occupational status) in Germany and contributes to previous research in two ways. Firstly, based on insights from theories of social capital and immigrant integration, we overcome the mere distinction between inter- and intra-ethnic ties. Instead, we approximate resources immigrants can access and mobilize by considering both the ethnic and socioeconomic compositions of their networks. Secondly, by using autoregressive cross-lagged panel models, we properly deal with the methodological challenge of endogeneity inherent to studies concerned with the relationship between social capital and labour market outcomes. Based on longitudinal data from the German Socio-Economic Panel the empirical findings indicate the necessity of considering both the ethnic and socioeconomic compositions of immigrants' networks—as both have independent effects on immigrants' labour market integration. We conclude that future research on the relationship between immigrants' social capital and their economic integration may benefit from approximating resources available through social contacts by considering not only the ethnic dimension but also the socioeconomic dimension of contacts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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33. Attitudes Toward Migration and Associational Activity: Evidence From Germany.
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Bakaki, Zorzeta, Böhmelt, Tobias, and Bove, Vincenzo
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SOCIAL capital ,MEMBERSHIP in associations, institutions, etc. ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,PUBLIC opinion - Abstract
We explore how associational activity—a key aspect of social capital—affects migration attitudes. It is argued that people's membership in sports clubs and associations likely leads to more negative views on migration. Exploiting the panel structure of the German Longitudinal Election Data, the empirical analysis provides support for our expectations. We also show that individuals' political orientation moderates the postulated effect. The findings further our understanding of how public opinion on migration is formed and we add to the literature on social capital by highlighting the potentially negative consequences one of its components can have. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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34. Good practice in reaching and treating refugees in addiction care in Germany – a Delphi study.
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Stylianopoulos, Panagiotis, Hertner, Laura, Heinz, Andreas, Kluge, Ulrike, Schäfer, Ingo, and Penka, Simone
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SUBSTANCE abuse risk factors ,RIGHT to health ,HEALTH services accessibility ,REFUGEE services ,REFUGEES ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
Background: Health and adequate access to health care are human rights. Refugees are at risk for substance abuse. Despite the known structural and personal risk factors for abuse, refugees in Germany continue to face barriers to adequate addiction prevention and care, which is a violation of the fundamental human right to health care. The question arises as to how barriers for refugees in reaching addiction services and care can be overcome. In the presented study, strategies for good practices to deconstruct these barriers were identified. Method: A total of 21 experts participated in a three-round, consensus-oriented Delphi-Process. The experts represented five different fields: addiction care services, including specialized programs for women, refugee aid services, academia, policy-making and immigrants' self-help services. Results: The Delphi-Process generated 39 strategies of good practice summarized in 9 major categories: Care System, Framework Conditions, Multilingualism, Information and Education, Access, Service-Level, Employee-Level, Employee-Attitudes and Networking. Conclusion: In order to guarantee human rights regarding health and adequate access to health care for refugees, institutional barriers limiting access to prevention and treatment programs for addictive disorders must be abolished. The identified good practice strategies for Germany, if widely implemented, could contribute to this aim. By opening up prevention and treatment facilities for refugees, other marginalized groups could also benefit. While some of the strategies need to be implemented at the institutional level, political steps are also required at the system level including, e.g. financing of adequate translation services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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35. Motivations for Adolescent COVID-19 Vaccination: A Comparative Study of Adolescent and Caregiver Perspectives in Germany.
- Author
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Rothoeft, Tobias, Brinkmann, Folke, Maier, Christoph, Selzer, Dominik, Dings, Christiane, Kuehn, Anna, Möhler, Eva, Grote, Hanna, Nonnenmacher, Alexandra, Wenning, Markus, Zemlin, Michael, Richter, Ulf, Lehr, Thorsten, and Lücke, Thomas
- Subjects
VACCINATION ,PARENT attitudes ,STATISTICAL power analysis ,LEISURE ,COVID-19 ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,PSYCHOLOGY of parents ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,COVID-19 vaccines ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,ONE-way analysis of variance ,FISHER exact test ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,FAMILY attitudes ,COMPARATIVE studies ,T-test (Statistics) ,GUARDIAN & ward ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DATA analysis software ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,ODDS ratio ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Given the crucial role of vaccination in halting the COVID-19 pandemic, it is imperative to understand the factors that motivate adolescents to get vaccinated. We surveyed adolescents and their accompanying guardians scheduled to receive a COVID-19 vaccination (Comirnaty) in an urban region in Germany in mid-2021 regarding their motivation for getting vaccinated and collected data on their sociodemographic characteristics, medical history, vaccination status, and any history of COVID-19 infection in the family. We also queried information strategies related to the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. Motivations for getting vaccinated were similar among adolescents and their parents. The primary reasons for vaccination were protection against SARS-CoV-2-related illness and gaining access to leisure facilities. This was not influenced by gender, health status, migration background, or the presence of chronic or acute diseases. The percentage of parents who had received SARS-CoV-2 immunization and the proportion of parents with a high level of education were higher among study participants than in the general population. Adolescents were especially willing to be vaccinated if they came from a better educational environment and had a high vaccination rate in the family. Emphasizing the importance of vaccination among all segments of the population and removing barriers to vaccines may lead to an ameliorated acceptance of COVID-19 vaccines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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36. Does the Immigration Issue Divide German Attitudes toward Social Welfare?
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Häkkilä, Laura, Pfeifer, Michael, and Toikko, Timo
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SOCIAL attitudes ,SOCIAL services ,GERMANS ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,REGIONAL differences ,WELFARE state ,POLITICAL attitudes - Abstract
This article explores the association of German attitudes toward social welfare and immigration, and how regional and political factors affect that relationship. The data was retrieved from Round 8 of the European Social Survey, which includes 2,852 German participants. Quantitative methodology was used to study the hypotheses. Analyses demonstrate that attitudes on immigration and social welfare are associated. However, the regional factor of Eastern and Western Germany and political self-placement shape the population concerning the relationship between social welfare and immigration. The immigration issue diverges the views of both the leftists and Western Germans to social welfare more than the rightists and Eastern Germans. In this respect, the immigration issue shapes the view of the German welfare state. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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37. Embodying legal precarity: Living with ongoing short‐term protection in Germany.
- Author
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Suerbaum, Magdalena
- Subjects
PRECARITY ,INSCRIPTIONS ,BUREAUCRACY ,STATUS (Law) ,IMMIGRANTS ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
Immigration regimes pay particular attention to the migrant's body in the process of legal and bureaucratic inscription. Legal precarity, defined by the repeated reception of short‐term protection from deportation, is an existential and deeply embodied experience. The analysis of Schwangerschaftsduldung (temporary suspension of deportation based on pregnancy) and protection for unaccompanied minors, two legal situations in Germany, can shed light on how the migrant's body receives centre stage in the process of legal status determination and shows how the long journey to relative legal stability deeply affects the body. The two legal categories have in common a temporal limitation and an association with bodily transformations. By centring on the legal trajectories of three migrants, this article shows how the body is taken as the marker of vulnerability and (un)deservingness and becomes the bearer of legal precarity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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38. Delegating migration control to local welfare actors: Reporting obligations in practice.
- Author
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Bruzelius, Cecilia, Ratzmann, Nora, and Reiss, Lea
- Subjects
RESEARCH methodology ,SOCIAL workers ,LOCAL government ,MIGRANT labor ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,INTERVIEWING ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,GOVERNMENT policy ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,PUBLIC welfare ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,POLICY sciences ,SOCIAL case work - Abstract
Most research on the social policy–migration control link focuses on indirect control, that is, denying access to welfare. This article instead draws attention to how welfare institutions are made directly involved in migration control through duties to report certain categories of migrants to migration authorities. We ask how these obligations are put into practice and how local governments shape this process. In so doing, we place special emphasis on local organisational fields – that is, the close horizontal connection between public and non-public actors involved in basic needs provision. The article builds on exploratory research across four German cities, drawing on 61 interviews conducted in 2019–2020 with welfare actors catering to basic needs (housing/shelter, healthcare, social assistance, social counselling) and document research. Based on this, we, first, explore patterns of reporting practices and provide a typology of different responses, ranging from elaborate circumvention strategies to over-compliance. Second, we analyse the domino effects of reporting obligations, namely how welfare actors that are exempted from reporting adopt their practices too, with consequences both for migrants' welfare access and for other authorities' ability to report. Finally, we discuss how local governments can shape reporting practices, demonstrating how some cities actively sanction circumvention strategies. The last part identifies venues for further research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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39. The immigrant-native gap in risk and time preferences in Germany: levels, socio-economic determinants, and recent changes.
- Author
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Deole, Sumit S. and Rieger, Marc Oliver
- Subjects
SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,REFUGEES ,EVIDENCE gaps ,FREELANCERS ,SELF-employment ,WAGE differentials ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,IMMIGRANTS - Abstract
We present new descriptive evidence on the immigrant-native gap in risk and time preferences in Germany, one of immigrants' most preferred destination countries. Using the recent waves of the Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) dataset, we find that the immigrant-native gap in risk preferences has widened for recent immigration cohorts, especially around the time of the 2015 European Refugee Crisis. We attribute the recent widening to decreased assimilation rates of new immigrants caused by reduced integration due to sudden increases in immigrants flows from culturally diverse parts of the world, particularly around the year 2015. We also find that the immigrant-native gap varies across different migrant groups: "Opportunity seekers," which we define as economic immigrants who intend to stay in Germany only temporarily, are very similar in their risk preferences to natives. Other immigrants, however, are substantially more risk averse than natives. A smaller gap in risk preferences is also found among migrants who are female, highly educated, proficient in the host language, self-employed, and working in predominantly high-skilled jobs. Concerning time preferences, a noticeably large immigrant-native gap is evident, but the gap does not vary across most individual-level socio-economic variables. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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40. Transnational Turkish–German community in limbo. Consequences of political tensions between migrant receiving and sending countries.
- Author
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Ünver, Osman Can
- Subjects
GENOCIDE ,ARMENIAN genocide, 1915-1923 ,COMMUNITIES ,TURKS ,POLITICAL science ,COUNTRY of origin (Immigrants) ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,WESTERN countries ,MIGRATIONS of nations - Abstract
A profound political tension between Turkey and Germany has gained an overall dimension on the political agenda of the intra‐European migration discussion since 2016. As close trade partners, Turkey and Germany became gradually political adversaries on different issues. 2016 and the following years marked a turnover in the already worsened mutual relations. A series of political issues such as recognising the Armenian genocide in 1915, open allegations and critical views against the Turkish President and prohibition of election campaigns for Turkish government politicians in Germany had driven political relations between the two countries to nadir. This obscure situation led the Turks of Germany (The phrases "Turks of Germany" or "Turkish migrants" are persons with migration background from Turkey who still bear Turkish citizenship or formerly were Turkish citizens. This group's ethnic or confessional identity is not recognised; their legal status and country of origin are preponderant.), who have close ties to their ancestors' homeland and consider Germany as the centre of their lives, nolens volens into a limbo situation. Within the "guest‐worker program" framework in the second part of the 20th century, highly industrialised countries of Western Europe recruited migrant workers from different countries. This workforce should perform mostly blue‐collar labour in the receiving countries. After six decades of Turkish presence in Germany, the grandsons and granddaughters of the former guest workers are well‐represented in almost every sector of the society. However, their loyalty and integrability to the receiving country are challenged by German politics, especially by the governments of conservative chancellor Angela Merkel (2005–2021). If Turks of Germany feel closely connected to Turkey and Turkish culture (Workers from Turkey brought with them to the country of immigration their own "cultural assets". Those are, language, religious and customary beliefs, social habits, dress, music, literature, social codes and manners, shared history, food, etc. However, migrants in the receiving country undergo a process of hybridity under the influence of the new cultural environment. (Please see: Bhabha [The location of culture, New York, NY: Routledge, 1994]) Culture within the framework of post‐colonialism has also been discussed in Edward W. Said's book "Culture and Imperialism" (Said [Kültür ve Emperyalizm. Kapsamlı Bir Düşünsel ve Siyasal Sorgulama Çalışması. Hil Yayın: İstanbul, 1998]). If Turks of Germany feel closely connected to Turkey and Turkish culture, they are not recognised as integrable members of the society. Identity‐based and culture‐oriented policies inexorably influence the willingness of migrants to feel like equal members in the host society, and it applies even to the new generations with migration backgrounds. The question of migrant integration is the most emotionally debated issue in Germany and seems to be the greatest challenge in the political agenda. Beyond the bilateral Turkish–German issues, the growing xenophobic sentiments, islamophobia and Europe‐wide political populism may cause a persistent bilateral tension in the medium term between the countries and among the transnational and native communities. Anti‐Turkish rhetoric in the media alienates the Turkish community and has a value to jeopardise integration efforts more and more. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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41. Migration and Dynamics in Men's and Women's Domestic Work.
- Author
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Krieger, Magdalena and Salikutluk, Zerrin
- Subjects
HOUSEKEEPING ,IMMIGRANTS ,CULTURE ,NOMADS ,TIME ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,QUANTITATIVE research ,SEX distribution ,SURVEYS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,FAMILY relations - Abstract
International migration of couples is rising. Still, there is little evidence on men's and women's domestic work hours before and after migration. This is despite the fact that domestic work provides deep insights into family life and, for migrants, is directly linked to integration. Therefore, this study examines how immigrant men and women change their domestic work hours following migration, using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP). Our results show that domestic work hours increase for both genders after immigration. However, men are more responsible for running errands than women in the first years after migration. In the long term, the gender gaps return to the pre-migration state, with women shouldering a greater load than men. Accordingly, this study shows that migration only has a short-term impact on couples' division of domestic work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Immigration and Perceived Social Position. Insights from an Unintended Survey Experiment.
- Author
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Fazio, Andrea and Florio, Erminia
- Subjects
SOCIAL status ,SOCIAL attitudes ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
Using data from an involuntary survey experiment in Germany, we investigate whether priming people on immigration affects their self-perceived social standing. Our findings suggest that individuals who are administered a module concerning attitudes toward immigration perceive themselves as in a higher social position than would otherwise. Consistently with previous literature, we find that this effect is driven by right-wing-leaning individuals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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43. Talent Migration Governance and the COVID-19 Pandemic: Comparing Germany and Singapore.
- Author
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Cerna, Lucie and Chou, Meng-Hsuan
- Subjects
MIGRATIONS of nations ,COVID-19 pandemic ,MIGRANT labor ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
We compare Germany and Singapore to see how their approaches toward talent migration governance have evolved in the last decade and whether and how the COVID-19 pandemic has affected these developments. Building on the Highly-Skilled Immigration Index (HSII), our discussions show Germany becoming very welcoming of high-skilled labor migrants, and Singapore becoming increasingly selective in which labor migrants it admits into the City State. Our findings reveal that the COVID-19 pandemic has not changed the direction of policies in Germany and Singapore, but it has affected talent migration rates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Zur Diskrepanz von DaF an staatlichen Bildungseinrichtungen und privaten Sprachlehrinstituten in Marokko: Eine Frage der Lernmotivation.
- Author
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Bouchara, Abdelaziz
- Subjects
GERMAN language ,PRIVATE schools ,LANGUAGE & languages ,LANGUAGE schools ,SKILLED labor ,PHILOLOGY ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,STUDENT passports - Abstract
Copyright of German as a Foreign Language is the property of German as a Foreign Language and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
45. Stateless in School: The 'discomfort' of Kurdish asylum seekers.
- Author
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Kenny, Ailbhe
- Subjects
POLITICAL refugees ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,STATELESS persons ,RACISM ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
The lives of children seeking asylum and refuge are complex; invariably both transnational and intersectional. Their educational needs and schooling experiences are often overlooked or lack nuanced understandings. This article focusses on Kurdish children seeking asylum in Germany. Qualitative data is presented to uncover the perceptions and understandings of schools, teachers and parents of children living through their unique educational experiences. These narratives are nestled within a macro context of worldwide forced migration and how formal education is responding to this but also the geo-political context of Kurdish statelessness. The analysis reveals that the children were spatially, culturally, linguistically, racially, socially and politically marginalised. This was both implicit and explicit; embedded within policy and practice. The study highlights the school as a prime location where racial identity and asylum seeking intersects with the multiple realities of childhood, migration, and education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Germany, year 2020. The tension between asylum right, border control, and economy, through the imperative of deservingness.
- Author
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Fontanari, Elena
- Subjects
RIGHT of asylum ,BORDER security ,IMMIGRANTS ,IMMIGRATION enforcement ,LABOR market ,REFUGEES ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
This article discusses the new asylum laws implemented in Germany from 2015 to 2020 and places them in the wider context of the bordering process developed in Europe to control migrants' mobility since the year 2011. 'Asylum packages' and the Integration Act combine a restriction of asylum rights with measures to quickly channel refugees into the German labor market. Focusing on a specific regulation that aims at integrated rejected asylum-seekers through vocational training programs—the Ausbildungsduldung —this article highlights the contradictions from the attempts to meet the German economic needs and the efforts to enforce migration control. Moreover, this work highlights how the moral economy of deservingness, which underpins the practices of confinement and selection of the migrant population, influences the new laws. Ultimately, the asylum realm is deprived of being the source of the right to stay, whose conditionality became anchored to the needs of the German economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Characterising two German city networks: the interplay of internal structure, issue orientation and outreach strategies.
- Author
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Heimann, Christiane, Gluns, Danielle, and Schammann, Hannes
- Subjects
EMIGRATION & immigration ,DIVERSITY & inclusion policies ,POLITICAL agenda ,MUNICIPAL government - Abstract
Making use of qualitative data from case studies on two of the most important city networks in the field of migration and diversity in Germany, this contribution aims to deepen the understanding of city networks and their modes of operation. Based on a literature review covering the characteristics of city networks we propose an analytical framework that distinguishes between the dimensions of internal and external representation. This framework enables the analysis of the two cases: Deutscher Städtetag (Association of German Cities) and Kommunaler Qualitätszirkel zur Integrationspolitik (Municipal Quality Circle on Integration Policy). While the former is an umbrella organisation of larger cities, the latter can be described as an informal network of likeminded municipalities in the field of migration and diversity. In order to shed light on the interplay of structure, strategies and issues addressed by these networks (in the field of migration), we draw on the analysis of various documents as well as participant observation and face-to-face interviews. Concluding, we critically discuss the conventional characteristics of city networks and develop assumptions on how a network's structure influences its outreach strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Does living in districts with higher levels of ethnic violence affect refugees' attitudes towards the host country? Empirical evidence from Germany.
- Author
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Schwitter, Nicole and Liebe, Ulf
- Subjects
ETHNIC conflict ,REFUGEES ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,XENOPHOBIA ,SOCIAL integration ,RACE relations - Abstract
While there are many quantitative studies examining the determinants of ethnic violence from the perspective of offenders, less is known about the effects of violence on the victims or target groups. In light of the increased refugee migration in Germany in 2015/2016, we provide empirical evidence that living in districts with a past of ethnic violence against refugees affects refugees' perception of the host country negatively. We are using survey data from the German Socio-Economic Panel which we matched with data on ethnic violence. Albeit refugees had positive attitudes towards Germany – they felt overwhelmingly welcome, safe, and were barely worried about xenophobia – they were considerably less likely to feel this positive in districts with a high accumulated share of arson attacks on refugee homes. As living in contexts with higher levels of past and present ethnic violence can influence refugees' attitudes, this has implications for integration processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Dilemmas around temporariness and transnational recruitment agencies: the case of migrant caregivers in Taiwan and Germany.
- Author
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Marchetti, Sabrina, Geymonat, Giulia Garofalo, and Di Bartolomeo, Anna
- Subjects
CAREGIVERS ,MIGRANT labor ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,TRANSNATIONALISM ,ELDER care ,POPULATION aging - Abstract
The precarious nature of caregivers' migration is one of the fundamental characteristics of the growing marketisation of home-based care at the transnational level. Against this background, scholars have dedicated increasing attention to the role of private actors involved in the transnational recruitment/employment of migrant caregivers, such as the for-profit agencies, asking whether these intermediaries are a good or a bad thing. In order to understand the dilemmas facing this complex scenario, we interviewed trade unionists, activists, and academic experts in Taiwan and Germany, both of which are countries where the growing care needs of the ageing population are addressed by employing caregivers from abroad. In these interviews, research participants in both countries strongly criticised the emergence of transnational agencies as influential actors in the field and accused them of reproducing an exploitative temporariness of work for migrant caregivers and of the care services they provide, grounded in the temporary dimension of their mobility patterns. The research participants also evaluated the current situation as they tried to imagine alternative arrangements. Advocates for migrant caregivers' rights expressed intense frustration at the widespread acceptance of today's situation but they also suggested that other forms of intermediaries and of temporariness might be developed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Situating the Bauhaus in Cold War Germany.
- Author
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Breuer, Gerda
- Subjects
BAUHAUS ,COLD War, 1945-1991 ,FURNITURE design ,CATALOGS ,ANTHOLOGIES ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,WOOD veneers & veneering ,WORLD War I ,ARCHITECTURAL philosophy - Abstract
While Bauhaus modernism was generally taboo in the GDR until the 1970s, many former Bauhaus members at the same time remained committed to Bauhaus design practice and principles. Graph Graph Graph Graph The Bauhaus was never just a school, but was also subject to various forms of instrumentalization, politicization, and, at the same time, depoliticization in the process of its reception. Consequently, it is no surprise that an outstanding number of former Bauhaus members, many of them largely forgotten after thirteen years of dictatorship, were represented in the early documentas: seventeen Bauhaus members were to be seen with almost 300 works in the first three exhibitions, and the visual appearance of the catalogues of the first few decades was also very close in style to Bauhaus typography. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
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