Transition to adulthood of refugee and immigrant children in Canada
Authors: Yoko Yoshida and Jonathan Amoyaw
Overview
Abstract (English)
The majority of refugees are children and youth and their integration and life-course transitions are a research priority. This paper examines the timing of refugee children and youths’ entrance into the labour market and family formation (marriage/common law union and parenthood). It does so by examining how admission category, knowledge of a host country’s official languages, and age at arrival shape their transition to adulthood. Using data from the Canadian Longitudinal Immigration Database and Heckman selection estimation, the paper finds minimal variation in refugee children and youths’ entry into the labour market compared to children of other immigrant streams. It also finds that refugee children and youth start forming families at a younger age than children of economic class immigrants, but at an older age than family class children. The analysis also shows limited effects of knowledge of official language prior to arrival while age at arrival has a robust impact on their adulthood transitions. These findings shed light on the unique patterns of life-course transition among refugee children and youth and contribute to a better conceptualization of their experiences relative to children and youth of other immigrants.
Abstract (French)
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Details
Type | Journal article |
---|---|
Author | Yoko Yoshida and Jonathan Amoyaw |
Publication Year | 2020 |
Title | Transition to adulthood of refugee and immigrant children in Canada |
Volume | 41 |
Journal Name | Applied Psycholinguistics |
Number | 6 |
Pages | 1465-1495 |
Publication Language | English |
- Yoko Yoshida
- Yoko Yoshida and Jonathan Amoyaw
- Transition to adulthood of refugee and immigrant children in Canada
- Applied Psycholinguistics
- 41
- 2020
- 6
- 1465-1495