“…As a consequence of such a binary framing, refugees are pitched, politically constructed, and some would argue stigmatized, as a homogeneous group who are on the one hand, welfare-dependent, a bleed on business and a burden to society, and on the contrary, are a vulnerable and marginalized group of workers channeled into precarious employment in low skilled sectors. Overall, the marginalization from the labor market is also seen to be inextricably linked to challenges surrounding integration into the broader society (Baranik et al, 2018; Dedeoglu, 2022; Hebbani & Khawaja, 2019; Kesici, 2022, challenging this perspective, see D’Angelo et al, 2020). This positioning negates the fact that refugees arrive in their destination country with an array of skills-sets and backgrounds, job readiness, different hopes, dreams, and concerns about their educational, workforce, and settlement futures (Betts & Collier, 2017; Betts et al, 2017a, 2017b).…”