Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Elusive privilege : Class, race and gender in Ukrainian war migrants’ (un)employment in France

Gorbach, Denys LU orcid ; Polshchykova, Yevheniia and Ryabchuk, Anastasiya (2024) In Dialectical Anthropology
Abstract
What happens when the state removes the usual obstacles preventing refugees to ‘integrate’? Our article analyses the case of Ukrainians who fled the war to settle in France. Their legal status is different from that of ‘classic’ refugees: the EU directive on temporary protection gives them the freedom to move and the right to work. Moreover, they benefit from a rather positive attitude of the general public. The absence of racist stereotypes and institutional barriers, however, does not translate into easy integration into the labour market: 2 years after the beginning of the Ukrainian exile, two thirds of the refugees in Western Europe remain unemployed. Based on our fieldwork made in three French regions from February to August 2023, we... (More)
What happens when the state removes the usual obstacles preventing refugees to ‘integrate’? Our article analyses the case of Ukrainians who fled the war to settle in France. Their legal status is different from that of ‘classic’ refugees: the EU directive on temporary protection gives them the freedom to move and the right to work. Moreover, they benefit from a rather positive attitude of the general public. The absence of racist stereotypes and institutional barriers, however, does not translate into easy integration into the labour market: 2 years after the beginning of the Ukrainian exile, two thirds of the refugees in Western Europe remain unemployed. Based on our fieldwork made in three French regions from February to August 2023, we analyse the predicament of Ukrainian war migrants. We conclude that granting formal access to jobs and putting racist discrimination on pause is not enough to overcome other handicaps: lack of language and other ‘soft’ skills; lack of social capital that would allow insertion into formal and informal labour markets; the burden of social reproduction magnified by forced single motherhood; and the temporary nature of one’s supposedly generous legal status. The latter turns the perceived privilege into a handicap: Ukrainians are tolerated temporarily and being increasingly differentiated into ‘deserving’ and ‘undeserving’, ‘productive’ and ‘unproductive’ migrants. While those deemed ‘productive’ may be encouraged to remain in the EU, those who fail to integrate into the labour market are likely to gradually be cut off from social support and forced to return to Ukraine. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
epub
subject
keywords
Deservingness, France, migrants, refugees, Ukraine, war
in
Dialectical Anthropology
pages
17 pages
publisher
Springer
external identifiers
  • scopus:85210030459
ISSN
0304-4092
DOI
10.1007/s10624-024-09754-8
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
a64dfabc-6493-4f47-a4f2-da4acd1ee112
date added to LUP
2024-11-25 11:54:44
date last changed
2025-04-04 15:17:17
@article{a64dfabc-6493-4f47-a4f2-da4acd1ee112,
  abstract     = {{What happens when the state removes the usual obstacles preventing refugees to ‘integrate’? Our article analyses the case of Ukrainians who fled the war to settle in France. Their legal status is different from that of ‘classic’ refugees: the EU directive on temporary protection gives them the freedom to move and the right to work. Moreover, they benefit from a rather positive attitude of the general public. The absence of racist stereotypes and institutional barriers, however, does not translate into easy integration into the labour market: 2 years after the beginning of the Ukrainian exile, two thirds of the refugees in Western Europe remain unemployed. Based on our fieldwork made in three French regions from February to August 2023, we analyse the predicament of Ukrainian war migrants. We conclude that granting formal access to jobs and putting racist discrimination on pause is not enough to overcome other handicaps: lack of language and other ‘soft’ skills; lack of social capital that would allow insertion into formal and informal labour markets; the burden of social reproduction magnified by forced single motherhood; and the temporary nature of one’s supposedly generous legal status. The latter turns the perceived privilege into a handicap: Ukrainians are tolerated temporarily and being increasingly differentiated into ‘deserving’ and ‘undeserving’, ‘productive’ and ‘unproductive’ migrants. While those deemed ‘productive’ may be encouraged to remain in the EU, those who fail to integrate into the labour market are likely to gradually be cut off from social support and forced to return to Ukraine.}},
  author       = {{Gorbach, Denys and Polshchykova, Yevheniia and Ryabchuk, Anastasiya}},
  issn         = {{0304-4092}},
  keywords     = {{Deservingness; France; migrants; refugees; Ukraine; war}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Springer}},
  series       = {{Dialectical Anthropology}},
  title        = {{Elusive privilege : Class, race and gender in Ukrainian war migrants’ (un)employment in France}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10624-024-09754-8}},
  doi          = {{10.1007/s10624-024-09754-8}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}