Educated and underemployed: Refugee integration into the Canadian labour market |
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Authors: | Harvey Krahn Tracey Derwing Marlene Mulder Lori Wilkinson |
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Affiliation: | (1) Research affiliates Prairie Metropolis Centre Psychology Department, University of Saskatchewan, 9 Campus Drive, Saskatoon, SK, S7N 5A5, Canada |
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Abstract: | This study explores issues of access to high-status occupations in the Canadian labour market, with particular emphasis on refugees who were in professional or managerial positions prior to their arrival in Canada. The study is based on interviews with a sample of 525 adult refugees who were initially resettled in the province of Alberta between 1992 and 1997. About two thirds of the respondents came from former Yugoslavia, the remainder from countries in the Middle East, Central America, Africa, and Southeast Asia. Despite the generally high educational attainment of these refugees, the results show that they experience, much higher rates of unemployment, part-time employment, and temporary employment than do Canadian-born individuals. A variety of structural factors operating in a segmented Canadian labour market help to explain the downward mobility of these highly qualified refugees. The policy implications of these results are examined in detail. |
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