2010
DOI: 10.1007/s10680-010-9214-x
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Contrasting Trajectories of Labor-Market Integration Between Migrant Women in Western and Southern Europe

Abstract: The labor-market assimilation hypothesis predicts poorer initial labormarket outcomes among immigrants followed by convergence toward the outcomes of the native-born working-age population with time lived in the receiving country. We investigate the applicability of this hypothesis to migrant women's labor-force participation in Europe. We compare labor-force participation rate (LFPR) gaps between migrant and native-born women in nine European countries, and examine how these LFPR gaps change with migrant wome… Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(37 citation statements)
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References 34 publications
(47 reference statements)
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“…The migrants' FLFP rates increase with length of stay, and eventually reach about the same rates as those of the respective majority population (Rendall et al 2010). The empirical evidence on the economic success of migrant women cannot fully be explained by this theory, however.…”
Section: The Role Of the Migrant Status For Labour Market Participationmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…The migrants' FLFP rates increase with length of stay, and eventually reach about the same rates as those of the respective majority population (Rendall et al 2010). The empirical evidence on the economic success of migrant women cannot fully be explained by this theory, however.…”
Section: The Role Of the Migrant Status For Labour Market Participationmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…A large body of literature investigates various aspects of immigrants' lives: their employment and education (Adsera and Chiswick 2007;Rendall et al 2010), residential and housing patterns (Arbaci 2008;Musterd 2005), health and mortality (Hannemann 2012;Solé-Auró and Crimmins 2008;Wengler 2011), and legal status and citizenship (Bauböck 2003;Howard 2005;Seifert 1997). There has also been a growing interest in family and fertility dynamics among immigrants and ethnic minorities (Berrington 1994;Coleman 1994).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A large body of literature has examined various aspects of immigrants' lives in Europe, including their employment and education (Adsera and Chiswick 2007;Kogan 2007;Rebhun 2010;Rendall et al 2010), health and mortality (Sole-Auro and Crimmins 2008;Wengler 2011;Hannemann 2012), residential and housing patterns (Musterd 2005;Arbaci 2008), legal status and citizenship (Seifert 1997;Bauböck 2003;Howard 2005), and linguistic, cultural, and religious diversity (Foner and Alba 2008;Gungor, Fleischmann, and Phalet 2011). The recent literature has also exhibited an increasing interest in the study of family dynamics and patterns among immigrants and their descendants.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%