Post-Migration Education Among Refugees in the Netherlands
Publication date
2022-01-13
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Abstract
Refugees face significant barriers in the labor markets of western countries due to limited transferability of educational credentials. Post-migration education can increase refugees’ chances in the labor market, but little is known about the prevalence and underlying patterns of such post-secondary educational investments. I contribute to the literature by analyzing survey data from the Netherlands on post-migration education among more than 3,000 adult refugees who come from Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, former Yugoslavia, and Somalia. I find that refugees’ investments in schooling depend on both pre- and post-migration characteristics. Results show that post-migration schooling is more common among adult refugees who are higher educated, who arrived at a younger age, who have applied for recognition of their foreign education, and who have (successfully) participated in integration and/or language courses. When refugees are kept in an asylum center for a longer time, they are less likely to invest in post-migration education.
Keywords
human capital, Netherlands, post-migration education, refugees, schooling, General Social Sciences, SDG 16 - Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions
Citation
van Tubergen, F 2022, 'Post-Migration Education Among Refugees in the Netherlands', Frontiers in Sociology, vol. 6, 787009, pp. 1-11. https://doi.org/10.3389/fsoc.2021.787009