Citizenship and employment in two cold countries: Canada and Sweden compared
Auteurs: Pieter Bevelander et Ravi Pendakur
Rédacteurs: James Frideres et John Biles
Aperçu
Résumé (français)
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Résumé (anglais)
Over the last decades, both Canada and Sweden have liberalized citizenship regulations for permanent residents. During the same period, immigration patterns by country of birth have changed substantially, with an increasing number of immigrants arriving from non-western countries. The aim of this paper is to explore the link between citizenship and employment probabilities for immigrants in both countries, controlling for a range of demographic, human capital, and municipal characteristics such as city and co-ethnic population size. We use data from the 2006 Canadian census and Swedish register data (STATIV) for the year 2006. Both STATIV and the Census, include similar sets of demographic, socio-economic and immigrant specific. We use instrumental variable regression to examine the “clean” impact of citizenship acquisition and the size of the co-immigrant population on the probability of being employed in both countries.
Détails
Type | Chapitre de livre |
---|---|
Auteur | Pieter Bevelander et Ravi Pendakur |
Rédacteur | James Frideres et John Biles |
Année de pulication | 2012 |
Titre de livre | International perspectives: Integration and inclusion |
Titre du chapitre | Citizenship and employment in two cold countries: Canada and Sweden compared |
Pages | 251-272 |
Éditeur | University of Toronto Press |
Ville | Toronto, ON |
Langue de publication | Anglais |
- Pieter Bevelander
- Pieter Bevelander et Ravi Pendakur
- Citizenship and employment in two cold countries: Canada and Sweden compared
- 2012
- International perspectives: Integration and inclusion
- James Frideres et John Biles
- 251-272
- Toronto, ON
- University of Toronto Press