Labour Market Integration: Aussiedler and Jewish Immigrants from the Former Soviet Union in Germany and Israel
Research question/goal:
The project is designed to more stringently test hypotheses concerning the focal factors influencing labour market integration, such as selectivity of immigrants and institutional circumstances within the receiving society, by strategically comparing immigrants from the former Soviet Union to Israel with those who immigrated to Germany. To this end, secondary data were analysed, and primary data collected and evaluated.
Results: The institutional peculiarities of both receiving countries do not lead, as expected, to self-selective immigration. Jewish immigrants from the former Soviet Union in either country are equally well qualified. However, the divergent findings with regard to their integration into the labour market in both countries can be explained by the well established social welfare state in Germany. The temporally unlimited material support provided by the state to the unemployed in Germany enables them to search for a suitable job, which leads both to a higher rate of unemployment as well as to more frequent occupancy of qualified positions.
At the nation level, the following holds true: In explaining the disadvantage of both groups of immigrants as compared to Ethnic Germans regard to the risk of unemployment as well as in terms of professional positioning, it is primarily their endowment with host country specific resources (continuing education onsite, language skill and network composition) that plays a role.
Comparative differences between the two groups of immigrants surface particularly under longitudinal observation. Jewish quota refugees take twice as long as Ethnic Germans do to obtain their first job after immigration to Germany; however, the positions they ultimately attain are frequently better. On the one hand, Jewish quota refugees make better use of the chance offered by the social safety net to accumulate resources specific to the receiving country than do Ethnic Germans. They participate longer in continuing education programmes and more frequently complete higher degrees or professional/vocational qualification. They invest more time learning German and even outperform the Ethnic Germans. This procedure naturally delays their entry into the job market while at the same time enabling their ultimate positioning in highly qualified jobs. The baseline differences between the two groups of immigrants continue to imprint their professional careers, since mobility between the job market segments is limited.
Publications
Book Chapters
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(2005): Jewish immigration from the former Soviet Union to Germany and Israel in the 1990s. 249-265. Oxford, Berghahn Books. More
Journal Articles
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(2014): Migrant Networks and Labor Market Integration of Immigrants from the Former Soviet Union in Germany. Social Forces, 92, 4, 1435-1456. More
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(2013): Immigrants' initial steps in Germany and their later economic success. Advances in Life Course Research, 18, 3, 185-198. More
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(2012): Potenziale nutzen! Determinanten und Konsequenzen der Anerkennung von Bildungsabschlüssen bei Zuwanderern aus der ehemaligen Sowjetunion in Deutschland. Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie, 64, 1, 67-89. More
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(2011): Differences in earnings assimilation of immigrants from the former Soviet Union to Germany and Israel during 1994-2005: The interplay between context of reception, observed and unobserved immigrants' attributes. International Journal of Comparative Sociology, 52, 1-2, 6-24. More
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(2008): Jüdische Immigration aus der ehemaligen Sowjetunion: Ein natürliches Experiment zur Migrationsentscheidung. Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie., Sonderheft, 48, 185-201. More
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(2007): Next year in Jerusalem … or in Cologne? Labour Market Integration of Jewish Immigrants from the Former Soviet Union in Israel and Germany in the 1990s. European Sociological Review, 23, 2, 155-168. More
Presentations
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(2012): Immigrants' initial steps in Germany and their later economic success. [Joint workshop The Role of Institutional Practices for Building Successful Mutlicultural Societies between University of Toronto and Goethe University Frankfurt, University of Toronto, 24/06/2012 - 25/06/2012]. More
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(2012): Human capital transferability and immigrant investment in host country education and training. [Department Seminar in Antwerp, University of Antwerp, 08/01/2012 - 08/01/2012]. More
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(2012): Determinants and consequences of the recognition of education among immigrants in Germany. [Seminar, University of Oxford, Oxford, 20/01/2012 - 20/01/2012]. More
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(2012): Credential recognition among immigrants in Germany and their investment in host country education and training. [International Sociological Association (ISA) Research Committee (RC) 28, Summer Meeting Labour Market and Education Transitions in Uncertain Times, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, 12/08/2012 - 14/08/2012]. More
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(2011): Human capital transferability and immigrant investment in host country education and training. [ECSR 20th Anniversary Conference, Dublin, 14/12/2011 - 16/12/2011]. More
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(2011): Human capital transferability and immigrant investment in host country education and training. [Seminar University of Essex, ISER, Colchester, 11/12/2011 - 12/12/2011]. More
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(2011): On the determinants and consequences of the recognition of education among immigrants in Germany. [Conference „Between national closure and supranational governance: work , welfare and migrant integration in Germany and the EU”, Toronto, 27/04/2011 - 05/05/2011]. More
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(2011): Migrant Networks and Labour Market Integration of Immigrants from the FSU in Germany. [Norface Migration Workshop, London, 05/04/2011 - 08/04/2011]. More
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(2007): Jüdische Einwanderer in Deutschland und Israel: Die Rolle institutioneller Kontexte. [Conference 'Russian-speaking Jews in Israel and Germany', Jerusalem, 20/03/2007 - 21/03/2007]. More
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(2007): Jüdische Einwanderer in Deutschland und Israel: Die Rolle institutioneller Kontexte. [International conference 'Russian-speaking Jews in Israel and Germany', Jerusalem, 20/03/2007 - 21/03/2007]. More
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(2006): Research on the structural assimilation of immigrants from the former Soviet Union in Germany. [Workshop 'The Integration of Second-Generation Russians in Germany, Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia and Finland', Tallinn, 14/12/2006 - 15/12/2006]. More
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(2006): Next year in Jerusalem … or in Cologne? Labor Market Integration of Jewish Immigrants from the Former Soviet Union in Israel and Germany in the 1990s . [Joint workshop of the Network of excellence 'International Migration, Integration and Social Cohesion' (IMISCOE) and the 'International Network of Economic Research' (INFER), Osnabrück, 27/01/2006 - 28/01/2006]. More