The impact of migrants’ knowledge about their social rights on their subjective well-being

Publication date

2023-07-05

Authors

Seibel, VerenaISNI 0000000454675564

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Introduction: In this contribution I examine the role of migrants' knowledge about their social rights (system knowledge) for their subjective well-being. Based on the Social Production Function Theory, I expect system knowledge to be positively associated with migrants' well-being. Migrants who are well informed about their social rights are likely to have better access to resources that are crucial for their well-being such as healthcare or financial security. Moreover, I expect that knowledge in certain domains which affect daily life, such as healthcare, matter more than knowledge in other domains, which are life-course specific, such as childcare. Methods: I make use of the Migrants' Welfare State Attitudes (MIFARE) data which includes the perspective on the welfare state of migrants from nine different origin countries across three receiving countries: Denmark, the Netherlands, and Germany. Linear regression analyses were applied. Results: Results indicate that migrants differ extensively in their social rights knowledge. Moreover, migrants' knowledge about their social rights is indeed positively associated with subjective well-being, though the effect is not equally strong in all three receiving countries and differs by welfare domain (healthcare, childcare, unemployment benefits, social assistance, and state pensions). Discussion: Knowledge about social rights matters for migrants' well-being. Policy advisors should therefore pay special attention to migrants' access to information about social right policies in order to increase their well-being.

Keywords

RDSsystem knowledge, social rights, wellbeing, migrants, MIFARE, welfare state, SDG 1 - No Poverty

Citation

Seibel, V 2023, 'The impact of migrants’ knowledge about their social rights on their subjective well-being', Frontiers in Political Science, vol. 5, 1067258. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpos.2023.1067258