Nyhed
The importance of employers in relation to labour market integration of refugees
Nyhed
The importance of employers in relation to labour market integration of refugees
Nyhed
Nyhed
Text: Charlotte Tybjerg Sørensen, Communications Officer
Photo: Colourbox
In the two research articles, published in Social Policy and Administration and Social Policy and Society, Rasmus Lind Ravn provides suggestions on which employers are most likely to succeed in integrating more refugees into the labour market, and what practitioners can be aware of when attempting to engage employers in active labour market policies.
Both articles are based on a representative questionnaire survey conducted among Danish employers in June 2019.
In the first article, Rasmus Lind Ravn has investigated which types of employers hire or do not hire refugees. Based on hierarchical cluster analyses, Rasmus Lind Ravn has developed a categorization; a typology of employers. Those who hire refugees are driven by different motives, attitudes and preconceptions about refugees. They can be divided into three types; knights, knaves and squires.
Rasmus Lind Ravn has also divided employers who have never employed refugees into three; aspiring knights, knights of fortune, and commoners.
In summary, the six types of employers have different attitudes, preconceptions and motivations for hiring or not hiring people with a refugee background.
(The article's further analyses show in which industries the different employer types are typically to be found, and it is discussed which labour market policy strategies can be used to engage more employers in labour market integration efforts.)
In the second article, Rasmus Ravn Lind describes the workplace factors, characteristics and employer attitudes associated with a higher probability of having people with a refugee background employed at the workplace.
- I expected that there would be a positive correlation between, on the one hand, attitudes towards social responsibility and refugees, previous socially responsible practices in the area and cooperation with the job centre and, on the other hand, having people with a refugee background employed at the workplace, says Rasmus Ravn Lind.
The analyses show that preconceptions about refugees, attitudes towards social responsibility and existing CSR practices (in the form of employing other vulnerable groups and having previous experience of employing refugees) play a role in relation to existing employment practices.
- This indicates that employers' attitudes and experiences are important factors in the labour market integration of refugees," says Rasmus Lind Ravn.
The analyses also show that there is a positive correlation between having been contacted by the job centre - with the purpose og persuading employers to either hire a refugee or getting a refugee for an internship - and having people with a refugee background employed.
- This indicates that a proactive outreach effort by the job centres can contribute to getting more people with a refugee background into employment," says Rasmus Ravn Lind.
Rasmus Ravn Lind's research articles help to show how employment-oriented integration efforts can potentially be improved and targeted.
- They give an idea of which employers are most likely to succeed in integrating more refugees into the labour market, and what practitioners can be aware of trying to engage employers, says Rasmus Ravn Lind.
1: No poverty
8: Decent work and economic growth
10: Reduces inequalities