2017
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-63295-7_7
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Migrant Status and Lone Motherhood – Risk Factors of Female Labour Force Participation in Switzerland

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Cited by 14 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…By contrast, females who migrated alone were at greater psychosis risk, raising the possibility that families provide an important source of social support for this group, potentially buffering acculturative stressors or reducing social isolation (Anjara et al, 2017). This is consistent with evidence suggesting that female migrants entering post-migratory labour markets experience more structural barriers to participation in securing employment (Llácer et al, 2007; Milewski et al, 2018; Riaño and Baghdadi, 2007), a task potentially made more stressful without additional family support (Riaño and Baghdadi, 2007). Migrant women are also more likely to be involved in precarious or exploitative jobs with little opportunity for career advancement (Llácer et al, 2007; Vissandjée et al, 2011).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…By contrast, females who migrated alone were at greater psychosis risk, raising the possibility that families provide an important source of social support for this group, potentially buffering acculturative stressors or reducing social isolation (Anjara et al, 2017). This is consistent with evidence suggesting that female migrants entering post-migratory labour markets experience more structural barriers to participation in securing employment (Llácer et al, 2007; Milewski et al, 2018; Riaño and Baghdadi, 2007), a task potentially made more stressful without additional family support (Riaño and Baghdadi, 2007). Migrant women are also more likely to be involved in precarious or exploitative jobs with little opportunity for career advancement (Llácer et al, 2007; Vissandjée et al, 2011).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…Traditionally, lone mothers were considered as labour market pioneers in Germany (Jaehrling et al, 2015) and their employment rates exceeded those of partnered mothers. This pattern can also be found in other European countries like Switzerland, France and Sweden (Jaehrling et al, 2015;Milewski et al, 2018). Although their employment rates remained quite stable since the 1980s, their full-time employment rates decreased and they lost this pioneering role in the course of the 1990s: Female labour force participation in general rose rapidly, but also a high number of partnered mothers entered the labour market -even though predominantly in (short) part-time (Botsch, 2015).…”
Section: Lone Parenthood In the German Contextmentioning
confidence: 80%
“…Fourth, we only considered women who cohabited with their partner before the birth of the first child. Although we took into account whether women are no longer cohabiting with their partner, employment trajectories around parenthood may differ among lone mothers (Milewski et al 2018). Fifth, small sample sizes for migrant origin women may have affected the precision of the estimates and significance levels.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%