Abstract

Refugee women from the Near and Middle East face specific challenges when entering the Austrian labour market. Particularly gender-based factors, including care and reproductive work, exert pressure on these women and constitute major hurdles for successful entry into employment in Austria. Based on nine qualitative interviews with refugee women who swiftly gained entry to the labour market as well as ten qualitative interviews with experts from public and private support organisations, we investigate refugee women’s social and cultural capital as well as the individual agencies that foster paths into the labour market. We introduce the concept of enablement as the process of gathering the preconditions for overcoming the challenges that arise on that path. Finally, we illuminate the ways in which the three dimensions of individual, relational and institutional enablement interrelate and shape individual agency with regard to labour market integration.

Highlights

  • The recent flow of refugee migration to Europe, which far comprises over three million refugees, peaked in 2015/2016

  • We developed an answer to the research question—how refugee women who were employed early in their integration process find their particular pathways into employment—by means of the concept of enablement

  • This concept describes the process of becoming able to conquer the challenges of access to the labour market and refers to the groundwork for the development of agency

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Summary

Introduction

The recent flow of refugee migration to Europe, which far comprises over three million refugees, peaked in 2015/2016. Our study does not ask how refugee women gain power in a classical sense but focuses on how they become able to develop individual agencies and find their way into employment in a new culture and society.

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