28 results
Search Results
2. Corporate sector engagement in contemporary 'crises': the case of refugee integration in Germany.
- Author
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Müller, Tanja R.
- Subjects
- *
REFUGEE children , *REFUGEES , *INSTITUTIONAL logic , *CORPORATION reports , *SOCIAL responsibility of business , *SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
Refugee integration is one of the main global challenges of the present, at a time when the corporate sector is regarded as a key actor in multi‐stakeholder partnerships through the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. This paper examines its role as a partner of the state in addressing the movement of refugees into Germany from 2015 onwards. Based on interview data and informal conversations with members of Wir Zusammen, an integration initiative, and supplemented by a review of business reports and media documentation, it discusses the multifaceted engagements by parts of the corporate sector in Germany with refugee integration. These are analysed as 'thin' and 'thick', and as following different institutional logics. The paper adds to understanding of the political dimensions of corporate responses, their potential to challenge the status quo, and their pitfalls. Ultimately, it argues that corporate involvement with humanitarian and development challenges works best when embedded locally and is context specific. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
3. Family expectations towards Spanish language maintenance and heritage language programs in Germany.
- Author
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Álvarez Mella, Héctor, Blattner, Charlotte, and Gómez-Pavón Durán, Ana
- Subjects
LANGUAGE maintenance ,SPANISH language ,BILINGUAL education ,FAMILIES ,FOREIGN language education ,SOCIOLINGUISTICS - Abstract
Family and educational institutions are the main centers of socialization in heritage language. Beyond the communicative and learning dynamics that take place in both environments, linguistic socialization also depends to a large extent on the relationship of families with educational spaces. The aim of this paper is to discuss families' expectations regarding the intergenerational transmission of Spanish and to explore their attitudes towards heritage language and educational programs in Germany. For this purpose, the results of an exploratory study based on surveys will be presented to compare the main arguments justifying Spanish-speaking families' decision to include heritage language courses or bilingual education spaces in their family language management in the German context. The analysis of the perception of families and their attitudes shows that the positive valuation of the family and instrumental dimension of heritage language influence families to include bilingual programs or heritage language classes in their family language management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. MIGRATION MANAGEMENT - THE CASES OF GERMANY AND HUNGARY.
- Author
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Milosavljević, Zoran and Maksimović, Andrijana R.
- Subjects
MASS migrations ,IMMIGRATION policy ,BORDER security ,UNDOCUMENTED immigrants ,CULTURAL policy ,ECONOMIC structure - Abstract
Copyright of Serbian Journal of Management is the property of Serbian Journal of Management 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
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- View/download PDF
5. Selbstständige Beschäftigung von geflüchteten Neuzugewanderten in ländlichen Räumen am Beispiel von Lebensmittelgeschäften: Aspirationen, Praktiken und ihr Beitrag für die lokale Versorgung.
- Author
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Kordel, Stefan, Sauerbrey, Dominic, and Weidinger, Tobias
- Subjects
LABOR market ,INTERNATIONAL economic integration ,RURAL geography ,COUNTRY life ,SELF-employment ,ACCULTURATION - Abstract
Copyright of Raumforschung und Raumordnung is the property of Oekom Verlag 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
6. Jobcenters' strategies to promoting the inclusion of immigrant and native job seekers: a comparative analysis based on PASS survey data.
- Author
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Lehwess-Litzmann, René and Söhn, Janina
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT policy ,JOB postings ,BASIC income ,PANEL analysis ,GERMAN language ,IMMIGRANTS - Abstract
This paper comparatively analyzes strategies of German Jobcenters to bring native and immigrant job seekers into employment. It focuses on clients who receive means-tested basic income for the unemployed, based on data from the Panel Study Labour Market and Social Security (PASS) from year 2015 to 2020. By way of logistic regression, the study identifies the impact of being an immigrant on the clients' probability of reporting different kinds of offers like job referrals or courses, controlling for a number of other influential factors. The study also looks deeper into the effects of immigrant-specific attributes, such as heterogeneous German language skills. We found that the likelihood of offers by Jobcenters largely depends on the amount of time since immigration. Recent immigrants have the lowest chance of reporting most of the studied measures of active labor market policies. For immigrants having stayed more than 4 years in Germany, however, we do not find a disadvantage, and some measures out of Jobcenters' toolbox are even more often offered to the longer-settled immigrants than to native clients. A possible explanation for the moderately under-average support of recent immigrants in terms of Jobcenters' measures could be an institutional focus on improving German language skills prior to approaching the labor market. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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7. Working for Protection? Precarious Legal Inclusion of Afghan Nationals in Germany and Switzerland.
- Author
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Wyss, Anna and Fischer, Carolin
- Subjects
AFGHAN refugees ,AFGHANS ,REFUGEES ,MASS migrations ,HUMAN migration patterns ,LIVING conditions - Abstract
This paper engages with the violent conditions deriving from neoliberal trends in European migration and asylum governance. We explore how continuous precarity, in conjunction with an integration imperative, affects the lives of recently arrived Afghan refugees in Germany and Switzerland. Drawing on critical engagements with the politics of integration and theories of violence, we argue that, in both European countries, Afghans are increasingly forced to earn their right to remain on the basis of labour‐market performance instead of obtaining humanitarian protection. Based on qualitative interview data, we show that persons with a precarious legal status are urged to fulfil neoliberal integration requirements to avoid being deported to their country of citizenship. Employing the "continuum of violence" as an analytical entry point, we specify how the interplay and consequences of structural and cultural violence manifest in the way those affected navigate precarious living conditions and uncertain futures in receiving countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. 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
9. Howto identify and typify arrival spaces in European cities--A methodological approach.
- Author
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Gerten, Christian, Hanhörster, Heike, Hans, Nils, and Liebig, Simon
- Subjects
CITIES & towns ,PUBLIC spaces ,NEIGHBORHOODS - Abstract
In the context of increasing mobility in recent decades, numerous studies have analysed the impact of migration on urban spaces. International immigration is mainly concentrated in certain urban areas, with these so-called arrival spaces offering important opportunities for migrants to gain a foothold in their new surroundings. However, the current state of research provides just limited ways of identifying and typifying these spaces. On the one hand, there are no transferable, quantitative concepts. On the other hand, current discussions tend to focus on socio-economically deprived spaces, neglecting more affluent areas. To identify a city's different (and partly newly emerging) arrival neighbourhoods and to adapt local policies to the specific needs of their residents, we have developed a methodological approach to identifying and typifying arrival spaces on a small-scale level. Using the case study of Dortmund in Germany, this paper presents this approach and its transferability to other European cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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10. Implementation of integrated care for type 2 diabetes Mellitus and Periodontitis in Germany: study protocol for a practice-based and cluster-randomized trial.
- Author
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Hennrich, Patrick, Queder, Annika, Altiner, Attila, Awounvo, Sinclair, Dyczmons, Jan, Eigendorf, Julian, Erdmann, Stella, Grobe, Thomas, Gutscher, Andreas, Herzig, Nicole, Jepsen, Søren, Kairies-Schwarz, Nadja, Kalmus, Olivier, Kliemannel, Fabian, Santos, Sara, Vanella, Patrizio, Wensing, Michel, Wilm, Stefan, and Listl, Stefan
- Subjects
DENTAL care ,HUMAN services programs ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,PRIMARY health care ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,DENTISTS ,TYPE 2 diabetes ,MEDICAL screening ,PERIODONTITIS ,INTEGRATED health care delivery - Abstract
Background: Type 2 Diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and periodontitis share common risk factors and influence one another. However, primary care and oral health care continue to operate separate from each other and fail to synchronize care for patients with T2DM and periodontitis. The purpose of this practice-based trial is to evaluate the implementation of a new integrated care pathway for patients with T2DM and periodontitis. The new approach integrates a screening for T2DM risk in dental care settings in patients with periodontitis, a screening for periodontitis risk in primary care settings in patients with T2DM, and mutual referrals between dentists and primary care physicians. Methods: Two practice-based studies will be carried out in parallel: (i) In dental care settings: a practice-based, multi-centric, cluster-randomized, controlled trial with a control and an intervention group; (ii) in primary care settings: a practice-based, multi-centric, non-randomized, controlled trial with a synthetic control group calculated from claims data. Following a two-step recruitment approach, 166 dentists and 248 general practitioners will be recruited, who themselves will recruit a total of 3808 patients in their practices. Patient data will be collected at baseline, 12 months, and 24 months after study enrollment. The evaluation comprises: (i) impact evaluation, using a hierarchical linear mixed model; (ii) process evaluation, based on surveys alongside the trials; (iii) economic evaluation. In addition, a Discrete-Choice-Experiment will identify provider's payment preferences for the new care approach. Discussion: Upon successful implementation, the intervention will enable health care providers to detect a risk for T2DM and periodontitis in patients at an early stage, thus providing patients an opportunity for timely diagnosis and therapy. Ultimately, this can lead to increased quality of life and reduced health care expenditures. On a methodologic level, the project provides novel insights into a complex intervention on the intersection of general practice and dental care. Trial registration: The study was prospectively registered at the German Clinical Trials Register (https://drks.de/search/de/trial/DRKS00030587) on 3. July 2023 under ID "DRKS00030587". [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Abstimmen wie Zuhause: Transnationales Wahlverhalten türkischer Staatsbürgerlnnen in Deutschland.
- Author
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Heller, Mareike and Karakayali, Serhat
- Subjects
POLITICAL affiliation ,COUNTRY of origin (Immigrants) ,TURKS ,BIRTHPLACES ,BEHAVIORAL assessment ,ELECTIONS ,VOTING ,DIPLOMATIC & consular service ,VOTER turnout ,VOTERS - Abstract
Copyright of Soziale Welt is the property of Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & 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
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Factors affecting the acculturation strategies of unaccompanied refugee minors in Germany.
- Author
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Garbade, Maike, Eglinsky, Jenny, Kindler, Heinz, Rosner, Rita, Sachser, Cedric, and Pfeiffer, Elisa
- Subjects
ACCULTURATION ,SOCIAL work with children ,MINORS ,SOCIAL participation ,REFUGEES ,REFUGEE children ,SOCIAL support - Abstract
Background: Different acculturation strategies might be related to different mental health outcomes and social participation of unaccompanied refugee minors (URMs), but little is known about which factors influence this acculturation process. Therefore, the aim of this investigation was to examine the impact of individual, stress-related, and contextual factors on the acculturation process of URMs in Germany. Methods: A sample of N = 132 URMs living in child and youth welfare service facilities in Germany completed questionnaires about their acculturation orientation, traumatic experiences, daily stressors, asylum stress, and perceived social support between June 2020 and October 2021. This investigation is part of the multi-center randomized control trial BETTER CARE. Data were analyzed descriptively and via multiple hierarchical regression. Results: Integration (43.5%) and Assimilation (37.1%) were the most common acculturation strategies used by URMs. Multiple hierarchical regression models showed that daily stressors (e.g., the lack of money) were associated with a stronger orientation toward the home country, whereas traumatic events were associated with a weaker orientation toward their home country. No significant predictors were found for the orientation toward the host country. Discussion: Overall, URMs in Germany showed favorable acculturation strategies. Nevertheless, daily stressors and traumatic experiences might influence this process. The implications for practitioners and policymakers are discussed with a view to further improving the acculturation process of URMs in Germany. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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13. Making the Match: The Importance of Local Labor Markets for the Employment Prospects of Refugees.
- Author
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Tsolak, Dorian and Bürmann, Marvin
- Subjects
LABOR market ,OCCUPATIONAL segregation ,REFUGEES ,EMPLOYMENT ,JOB vacancies ,STANDARD deviations - Abstract
We examine how local labor markets shape the employment prospects of refugees in Germany, where refugees are assigned to regions through a dispersal policy. While it is known that the characteristics of these regions affect the overall employment probability of refugees, previous studies have not investigated how refugees' chances of regaining their pre-migration occupation are affected by the local opportunities to find employment in these occupations. To address this gap, we use a large survey of refugees in Germany and link local-occupational labor market characteristics to their region of residence and pre-migration occupation. We decompose the effects of these detailed context characteristics by estimating linear probability regressions with and without fixed effects for regions and/or occupations. While our analyses show that the employment probability of refugees is indeed strongly influenced by the general local characteristics of their place of residence and general, nationwide characteristics of their pre-migration occupation, our analyses also show that the chances of refugees being employed in their pre-migration occupation are additionally driven by the local characteristics of their occupation. More specifically, our models reveal that a one standard deviation higher local share of foreigners in refugees' pre-migration occupation increases the average probability of an occupational match by around 25 percent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Social integration of Syrian refugees and their intention to stay in Germany.
- Author
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Hannafi, Cyrine and Marouani, Mohamed Ali
- Subjects
SOCIAL integration ,SYRIAN refugees ,SIMULTANEOUS equations ,INTENTION ,HUMANITARIAN assistance ,LANGUAGE ability ,ENDOGENEITY (Econometrics) - Abstract
In this study, we investigate the determinants of social integration of Syrian refugees and the impact of social integration on refugees' decision to stay in Germany, using the 2016 IAB-BAMF-SOEP Refugee Survey. Our econometric strategy is based on the estimation of a simultaneous equation model for social integration, economic integration, and the decision to stay, handling endogeneity issues through an instrumental variables strategy. Our first contribution is to show that economic integration has an impact on social integration for low- and medium-educated refugees only. Furthermore, language proficiency, having a child in Germany, refugee accommodation, and the number of acquaintances from other countries have a positive impact on social integration, while age has the opposite effect. Our second main result is that social integration affects the intention to stay in Germany, whereas economic integration does not. Moreover, education, English proficiency, and the number of daughters in Germany have a negative impact on the intention to stay. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
15. Consonant and Dissonant Experiences—Young Migrants' Understandings of Integration: A Cross-Country Comparison between Germany, Luxembourg, and Norway.
- Author
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Biaback Anong, Dorothea, Skrobanek, Jan, Wagner, Leonie, and Nienaber, Birte
- Subjects
IMMIGRANTS ,CONSONANTS ,GROUNDED theory - Abstract
Our article addresses two aspects of young migrants' understandings of integration: their own ideas of what integration is, and their perception of the destination society's concepts and expectations regarding their integration. We analyze qualitative interviews which were conducted in the Horizon 2020 project MIMY, in Germany, Luxembourg and Norway, using the grounded theory methodology. Our exploration shows that the young migrants' awareness of the existing ideas of integration surrounding them creates a complex reflective interaction between their own ideas and the (perceived) expectations from society. We identified aspects of consonance, where young migrants' ideas coincide with the expectations they perceive. More importantly, however, our research has discovered that the youth experience tensions and dissonance between their own ideas of what integration should be and the concepts and expectations regarding integration they feel confronted with by society. Our analysis revealed that while young migrants' understandings of integration are very close to state-of-the-art scientific conceptualizations of integration, this view is not matched by the meaning of integration they perceive around them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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16. Why do immigrants support an anti-immigrant party? Russian-Germans and the Alternative for Germany.
- Author
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Spies, Dennis Christopher, Mayer, Sabrina Jasmin, Elis, Jonas, and Goerres, Achim
- Subjects
RIGHT-wing populism ,RIGHT-wing extremism ,VOTING ,ETHNICITY ,SOCIAL integration ,IMMIGRANTS ,ELECTIONS - Abstract
By reaching a vote share of 12.6 percent in the 2017 federal election, the Alternative for Germany (AfD) ended Germany's rare status as a Western European polity lacking a significant Populist Radical Right Party (PRRP). Some of this support comes from a group not usually expected to vote for PRRPs: immigrant-origin voters. Recent survey data shows high levels of support for the AfD especially within the group of Russian-Germans – immigrants from the former Soviet Union and its successor states. What motivates these immigrant-origin voters to support an anti-immigrant party? This article argues that support for the AfD – besides immigration-related preferences – can be best explained by their levels of assimilation or incorporation for different domains regarding the mainstream German society. Especially low levels of economic and social integration, and in particular a strong ethnic identity, relate positively to favouring the German radical right. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Development and Validation of the Revised Multicultural Ideology Scale in Germany and Luxembourg.
- Author
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Stogianni, Maria, Berry, John W., Grigoryev, Dmitry, Murdock, Elke, Schmidt, Lea-Marie, and Back, Caroline
- Subjects
CONFIRMATORY factor analysis ,CULTURAL maintenance ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,CULTURAL pluralism ,IDEOLOGY - Abstract
A revised version of the Multicultural Ideology Scale (rMCI) is currently being developed to measure endorsement of multiculturalism in different cultural contexts. This study, which is part of a wider cross-cultural research project, presents the first assessment of the rMCI scale in the German language. The measure aims to cover several attitudinal dimensions of multiculturalism, relevant to the integration of different ethnocultural groups: Cultural Maintenance, Equity/Inclusion, Social interaction, Essentialistic Boundaries, Extent of Differences, and Consequences of Diversity. Two independent datasets were acquired from Germany (N = 382) and Luxembourg (N = 148) to estimate the factor structure of the rMCI using different confirmatory factor analysis techniques. The findings suggest that a four-factor solution, including Cultural Maintenance, Equity/Inclusion, Social interaction, and Consequences of Diversity, was the best fit for the data. Most of these subscales demonstrated adequate psychometric properties (internal consistency, convergent, and discriminant validity). The four-factor model of the rMCI was partially invariant across the two ethnic groups and full measurement invariance was established across gender. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Refugees and Art: Tailor-Made Integrative Art Projects by Identifying Citizen Target Groups.
- Author
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Schwarz, Nicole, Gross, Hellen, Cramer von Clausbruch, Stefanie, Hary, Katharina, and Weitzel, Lara
- Subjects
REFUGEES ,GERMANS ,ART associations ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,CITIZENS - Abstract
This study aims to find out if there are differences between non-participants and participants in Integrative Art Projects (IAPs), with regard to their attitudes towards integration, refugees, and IAPs. Further, with regard to IAPs, this study identifies different audience groups among German citizens, each possessing specific attitudes and characteristics. Methodologically, a survey has been conducted among n = 702 German citizens, and four citizen groups are defined through cluster analysis. The results show that participants in IAPs are more open-minded towards refugees and foreign cultures, compared to non-participants. By pointing out the individual characteristics of the defined clusters ("The open-minded," "The critical," "The uninvolved," "The preservers"), the study derives precise managerial implications for arts organizations, so as to adapt IAPs and their promotion to the needs of cluster-members. Participatory IAPs at eye-level and with challenging common goals are possible, especially for the cluster of "The open-minded," while for other clusters, greater focus should be devoted to identifying commonalities and learning about the out-group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
19. Ukrainian Refugees in Germany: Evidence From a Large Representative Survey.
- Author
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Brücker, Herbert, Ette, Andreas, Grabka, Markus M., Kosyakova, Yuliya, Niehues, Wenke, Rother, Nina, Spieß, C. Katharina, Zinn, Sabine, Bujard, Martin, Silva, Adriana R. Cardozo, Décieux, Jean Philippe, Maddox, Amrei, Milewski, Nadja, Sauer, Lenore, Schmitz, Sophia, Schwanhäuser, Silvia, Siegert, Manuel, Steinhauer, Hans, and Tanis, Kerstin
- Subjects
RUSSIAN invasion of Ukraine, 2022- ,REFUGEES ,GERMANS ,GERMAN language ,LIFE satisfaction ,REFUGEE children ,OCCUPATIONAL prestige - Abstract
This study describes the first wave of the IAB-BiB/FReDA-BAMF-SOEP Survey on Ukrainian Refugees in Germany, a unique panel dataset based on over 11,000 interviews conducted between August and October 2022. The aim of the IAB-BiB/FReDA-BAMF-SOEP Survey is to provide a data-infrastructure for theorydriven and evidence-based research on various aspects of integration among Ukrainian refugees in Germany, the second most important destination country in the EU after Poland, hosting over a million people who arrived in Germany shortly after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Based on the survey, this study also provides first insights into demographic, educational, linguistic, occupational, and social characteristics of this population. The analyses revealed that the refugee population comprised mostly young and educated individuals, with a significant proportion of females without partners and female-headed separated families. While German language skills were limited, about half of Ukrainian refugees had attended or were attending language courses. However, the integration process faced significant challenges, as the participation of children in day-care was relatively low, and the self-reported life satisfaction was markedly below the average of the German population. The study highlights the need for targeted policy measures to address such issues. Additionally, policies may aim at harnessing the high potential of the Ukrainian refugees for the German labor market. Given that a substantial proportion would like to stay in Germany permanently, policymakers should take note of these findings and aim to facilitate their long-term integration process to ensure that these refugees may thrive in Germany. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. 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
21. Mentoring as a grassroots effort for integrating refugees – evidence from a randomised field experiment.
- Author
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Jaschke, Philipp, Löbel, Lea-Maria, Krieger, Magdalena, Legewie, Nicolas, Kroh, Martin, Jacobsen, Jannes, and Schacht, Diana
- Subjects
MENTORING ,REFUGEE services ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,PROPENSITY score matching ,GERMAN language ,LANGUAGE ability ,SOCIAL belonging - Abstract
About 80 million people were displaced worldwide at the end of 2020. To support this highly vulnerable group, in recent years, local bottom-up initiatives proliferated to support refugee integration in hosting communities. This study examines a network intervention for refugees in collaboration with a social start-up whose mission is to match refugees and local volunteers to form friendships. We apply an innovative randomised controlled trial approach with 446 participants integrated into a survey of almost 8000 randomly sampled refugees who moved to Germany between 2013 and 2016. Despite the field experimental study design, statistical imbalances between treatment and control groups arise in the process of enrolment and matching up to the re-interview approximately one year after recruitment, which we address using propensity score weighting. Out of 85 successfully matched individuals, for the 30 refugees with the highest intensity of the intervention we find positive treatment effects on social connectedness, housing satisfaction, and, although less robust, German language proficiency. Thus, a general-purpose mentoring program can promote subjective integration. Effects on objective indicators, such as employment, may only indirectly come about in the longer run. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Do euro area institutions benefit the small member states?
- Author
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Sadeh, Tal, Rubinson, Eyal, and Raskin, Yoav
- Subjects
EUROZONE ,CORPORATE profits ,SMALL states ,POWER (Social sciences) - Abstract
In recent years, the pooling of authority among the member states of the euro area has intensified, expanding the remit of the Council, Commission and ECB. While it is commonly thought that large states dominate these institutions, a growing literature emphasizes the ability of small states to pursue their interests too. We explore whether the empowerment of euro area institutions was associated with relative net gains for small member states over large ones, and with relative losses during the euro crisis. We estimate the relationship between the relative amount of resources of different institutions, and the distribution of gains among members, throughout 1999–2016. We find that empowering the Council, the Commission or the ECB provides relative gains to small member states, although not against Germany. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Between Two Cultures: Multiculturalism and Voices of Children of Turkish Guest Workers on the Failed Project.
- Author
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Yaşar, H. Nur
- Subjects
MULTICULTURALISM ,CHILDREN of migrant laborers ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,STEREOTYPES - Abstract
Copyright of Artuklu Akademi is the property of Artuklu Akademi 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
24. New models of the "Good refugee" – bureaucratic expectations of Syrian refugees in Germany.
- Author
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Etzel, Morgan
- Subjects
SOCIAL integration ,SYRIAN refugees ,IMMIGRATION policy ,LABOR market ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
Since 2005, German immigration law required all refugees receiving social welfare benefits to undergo language and civic knowledge tests as a pathway to the labour markets. The German integration regime, which was grounded in social imaginaries, legislative initiatives and supranational agreements, produced bureaucratic and ideological challenges following the "long summer of migration". Syrian asylum seekers entering Germany navigated shifts in the social imaginary and legal changes that both narrowed the definitions of a "good refugee" and expanded the benefits given to a select group of asylum seekers and refugees. I apply ethnographic fieldwork beginning on the Turkish border with Syria in 2015 and later fieldwork across Germany to analyse shifting social landscapes. The prerequisites of integration made long-term residency permits and citizenship contingent on "good integration". The public recognition of "good" or "deserving" refugees was thus conditional on the fulfilment of a universal criteria of achievement in social competences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Employment effects of language training for unemployed immigrants.
- Author
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Lang, Julia
- Subjects
JOB vacancies ,FOREIGN workers ,UNEMPLOYED people ,LABOR market ,EMPLOYMENT - Abstract
Proficiency in the host country's language is an important factor for the successful labor market integration of immigrants. In this study, I analyze the effects of a language training program for professional purposes on the employment opportunities of participants in Germany. I apply an instrumental variable approach and exploit differences in lagged local training intensities. Bivariate probit estimates show that 2 years after the program started, the employment probability of immigrants who were unemployed in 2014 and participated in the program had increased by more than nine percentage points as a result of language training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The 'mixed bag' of segregation—On positive and negative associations with migrants' acculturation.
- Author
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Boileau, Lucia L. A., Bless, Herbert, and Gebauer, Jochen E.
- Subjects
IMMIGRANTS ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,ACCULTURATION ,SELF-perception ,DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,LANGUAGE & languages ,SATISFACTION ,COGNITION ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ETHNIC groups ,FOREIGN students ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Many researchers and practitioners consider ethnic segregation in neighbourhoods or schools detrimental to migrants' acculturation in host societies. Empirically, however, segregation is a 'mixed bag' and its effects depend crucially on the investigated acculturation domain (e.g., negative for language skills, positive for well‐being). As most prior studies have focused on a restricted spectrum of acculturation, a comprehensive assessment within one single study is needed to establish comparability across different acculturation domains. Among over 8000 immigrant‐background students from four countries, we investigated the association of classroom segregation, defined as opportunities for contact with natives and other migrants, with a broad spectrum of acculturation (academic, attitude‐related, identity‐related, social, health‐related, and psychological criteria). Some findings were consistent (e.g., academic acculturation), some were contrary to prior research (e.g., social acculturation). In sum, our results shed light on the 'mixed bag' of segregation and contribute to the understanding of a crucial social issue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. A general approach to integrating compression heat pumps into biomass heating networks for heat recovery.
- Author
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Chen, Yusheng, Standl, Phillip, Weiker, Sebastian, and Gaderer, Matthias
- Subjects
- *
HEAT recovery , *WASTE gases , *FLUE gases , *HEAT pumps , *ELECTRICITY pricing , *WASTE heat , *BIOMASS - Abstract
Over the past few years, studies have shown that the efficiency issue of biomass heating has become increasingly important to enhance their competitiveness. The integration of a compression heat pump into the system to recover heat from exhaust gases could be a promising solution. However, the different ways of integrating heat pumps lead to highly variable techno-economic results over their lifetime. To find out how to integrate compression heat pumps into a biomass heating network more effectively, a general approach for the integration is presented in this paper, where the heat pumps can be integrated either into the flue gas condenser or into the network return flow. A detailed model for implementing the integration approach is proposed and validated against the measured data from two real biomass heating networks. The evaluation results show that both integration variants improved system efficiency by more than 17% in practice. For a techno-economic comparison and analysis of both variants, the proposed integration approach is also applied to a use case in Germany. In the studied case, the flue gas-side integration is more cost-effective than the network-side integration, and both concepts improve system efficiency by 12.6%. By analyzing the technical parameters, it is noticed that both integration concepts can be achieved cost-effectively in practice by finding the optimal setpoint of exhaust gas temperature under certain conditions. The analysis of electricity and fuel prices shows that the integration concepts are sensitive to the ratio of electricity price and biomass fuel price. If the fuel prices increase sharply in the future, both concepts will take on greater significance. [Display omitted] • A general approach to integrating heat pumps into biomass heating for heat recovery. • Evaluation of operational experiences from the few real-world use cases. • Comparison and Evaluation of the different heat pump connection variants. • Selection of optimal concepts and design parameters under certain conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. A Digital Advisor Twin for Crop Nitrogen Management.
- Author
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Weckesser, Fabian, Beck, Michael, Hülsbergen, Kurt-Jürgen, and Peisl, Sebastian
- Subjects
CROP management ,DIGITAL twins ,DECISION support systems ,WINTER wheat ,TACIT knowledge ,WHEAT ,PATTERNMAKING - Abstract
Farmers and consultants face an unmanageable amount of diverse knowledge and information for crop management decisions. To determine optimal actions, decision makers require knowledge-based support. In this way, decisions can be improved and heuristics can be replaced over time. The study presents a digital knowledge base with an integrated decision support system (DSS), using the example of nutrient supply, specifically nitrogen (N), fertilization. Therefore, the requirements of farmers and crop consultants for DSS to inform fertilization decisions for winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) were elaborated using surveys, expert interviews, and a prototype test. Semantic knowledge was enriched by expert knowledge and combined in a web application, the Crop Portal. To map regional and personal decision making patterns and experiences, the tacit knowledge on the complex advisory problem of N fertilization is made digitally usable. For this purpose, 16 fuzzy variables were specified and formalized. Individual decision trees and their interactions with an integrative knowledge base were used to multiply the consulting reach of experts. Using three consultants and nine model farms from different soil–climate areas in Germany, the Crop Portal was tested under practical conditions and the perceived pragmatic and hedonic quality of the system was evaluated using a standardized questionnaire. The field test showed that the variation in fertilizer recommendations from the 'digital advisor twin' ranged from 5 kg N ha
−1 to 16 kg N ha−1 when compared with the decisions of the experts in the field. The study presents the participatory development and evaluation of a rule-based DSS prototype in agricultural practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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