How many hours do you have to work to be integrated? Full time and part time employment of native and ethnic minority women in the Netherlands

"Labor market participation is a central factor in the economic integration of migrants in their host country. Labor market integration of ethnic minority women is of special interest, as they may experience a double disadvantage: both as a woman and as a migrant. Since the late nineties this p...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bevelander, Pieter, Groeneveld, Sandra
Institution:ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
Format: TEXT
Language:English
Published: Bonn 2007
IZA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19125716124919439989-How-many-hours-do-you-have-to-.htm
_version_ 1771659895111680000
author Bevelander, Pieter
Groeneveld, Sandra
author_facet Bevelander, Pieter
Groeneveld, Sandra
collection Library items
description "Labor market participation is a central factor in the economic integration of migrants in their host country. Labor market integration of ethnic minority women is of special interest, as they may experience a double disadvantage: both as a woman and as a migrant. Since the late nineties this presumed double disadvantage has become more and more the focus of both Dutch integration and Dutch emancipation policy. To test several assumptions underlying Dutch policy this paper focuses on the employment patterns of ethnic minority and native women in the Netherlands. In particular, we analyze to what extent labor market participation of different groups of women and the hours they work are influenced by human capital and household characteristics. Our results show some remarkable differences in employment patterns between native Dutch and ethnic minority women. Controlling for educational level, partnership and the presence of children, native Dutch women are working more often in part time jobs than Mediterranean and Caribbean women. For all women the educational level is an important determinant of employment and the number of hours worked. Whereas the number of children influences both the employment decision and the number of hours worked of native Dutch women, for Mediterranean and Caribbean women there is only an effect of the number of children on the odds of having a full time job. "
format TEXT
geographic Netherlands
id 19125716124919439989_2dd93ea31bbe43d98f0a9628aa8f6f64
institution ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
is_hierarchy_id 19125716124919439989_2dd93ea31bbe43d98f0a9628aa8f6f64
is_hierarchy_title How many hours do you have to work to be integrated? Full time and part time employment of native and ethnic minority women in the Netherlands
language English
physical 27 p.
Digital
publishDate 2007
publisher Bonn
IZA
spellingShingle Bevelander, Pieter
Groeneveld, Sandra
employment
equal employment opportunity
ethnic group
labour force participation
minority group
social integration
statistics
women
working time
How many hours do you have to work to be integrated? Full time and part time employment of native and ethnic minority women in the Netherlands
thumbnail https://www.labourline.org/Image_prev.jpg?Archive=100422492860
title How many hours do you have to work to be integrated? Full time and part time employment of native and ethnic minority women in the Netherlands
topic employment
equal employment opportunity
ethnic group
labour force participation
minority group
social integration
statistics
women
working time
url https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19125716124919439989-How-many-hours-do-you-have-to-.htm