Download full text
(external source)
Citation Suggestion
Please use the following Persistent Identifier (PID) to cite this document:
https://doi.org/10.17645/si.v9i4.4646
Exports for your reference manager
Who Belongs, and How Far? Refugees and Bureaucrats Within the German Active Welfare State
[journal article]
Abstract Concepts such as “belonging” (Yuval‐Davis, 2011) and "community of value" (Anderson, 2013) try to capture the multiple ways of classifying migrants. In this article, we argue that belonging needs to be analyzed against the backdrop of active social citizenship in European welfare states. Although th... view more
Concepts such as “belonging” (Yuval‐Davis, 2011) and "community of value" (Anderson, 2013) try to capture the multiple ways of classifying migrants. In this article, we argue that belonging needs to be analyzed against the backdrop of active social citizenship in European welfare states. Although the literature acknowledges the increasing links between migration and social policies, the latest "turn to activation" in social policy has hardly been accounted for. By focusing on two policy fields in Germany, the labor market and health policies, we briefly describe discourses and social right entitlements and their ambivalences. Empirically we show (a) how bureaucrats within the two policy fields regulate and justify refugees' social rights in practice and (b) how refugees act vis‐à‐vis relevant institutional opportunity structures. Our study contributes to previous research twofold: Firstly, we illustrate processes of positioning and selecting refugees that stem from recent social policy architecture. Secondly, we demonstrate everyday experiences from refugees' vis‐á‐vis relevant institutional opportunity structures in Germany. Our results show that inconsistencies within and between social policy fields of one welfare state have to be taken into consideration for further national and transnational research.... view less
Keywords
welfare state; citizenship; migrant; social policy; EU; Federal Republic of Germany; labor market policy; health policy; bureaucracy; migration policy
Classification
Migration, Sociology of Migration
Social Security
Free Keywords
active social citizenship; belonging; female refugees; health policy; labor market policy; migration policy; social policy; welfare states
Document language
English
Publication Year
2022
Page/Pages
p. 217-226
Journal
Social Inclusion, 10 (2022) 1
Issue topic
Transnational Social Protection: Inclusion for Whom? Theoretical Reflections and Migrant Experiences
ISSN
2183-2803
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed