O'Dell Kevin Patrick, Fransen Sonja, Jolivet Dominique
UNU-MERIT, Maastricht University, Maastricht, the Netherlands.
J Int Migr Integr. 2023 Mar 27:1-34. doi: 10.1007/s12134-023-01015-x.
The COVID-19 pandemic and concomitant policy measures have disproportionally affected the lives of migrants worldwide. Focusing on inequalities between social groups, studies have tended to neglect the role of local embeddedness as a factor influencing the extent to which individuals are affected by COVID-19. In this paper, we study the vulnerabilities of people with different migration experiences in an urban setting in the early stages of the pandemic, focusing on three key livelihood assets: economic, social, and human capital (health). Our analyses are based on online survey data ( = 1381) collected among international migrants, second-generation residents (those with at least one parent born abroad), and non-migrants residing in Amsterdam in July 2020. We find that international migrants, and particularly those who arrived in the city more recently, reported larger shocks to their economic and social capital than other city residents. This finding illustrates the vulnerabilities of "newcomers" to the city and their limited resilience to shocks. Second-generation residents were particularly vulnerable in terms of health, but this relationship was strongly mediated by education and neighborhood effects. In all three groups, those with poor relative wealth and those who were self-employed were more vulnerable to economic shocks. Our findings illustrate how the COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated inequalities in vulnerabilities across migrant and non-migrant groups, and how those who were locally embedded, including migrants and non-migrants, were less likely to be negatively affected by the pandemic.
新冠疫情及相应政策措施对全球移民的生活造成了不均衡的影响。以往研究关注社会群体间的不平等,却往往忽视了本地融入这一因素在个体受新冠疫情影响程度方面所起的作用。在本文中,我们研究了疫情初期城市环境中不同移民经历人群的脆弱性,重点关注三项关键的生计资产:经济资本、社会资本和人力资本(健康)。我们的分析基于2020年7月在阿姆斯特丹的国际移民、第二代居民(父母至少一方出生在国外的人)和非移民中收集的在线调查数据(=1381)。我们发现,国际移民,尤其是那些近期抵达该市的移民,比起其他城市居民,其经济和社会资本受到的冲击更大。这一发现说明了城市“新移民”的脆弱性以及他们应对冲击的恢复力有限。第二代居民在健康方面尤为脆弱,但这种关系在很大程度上受到教育和社区效应的调节。在这三组人群中,相对财富较低者和个体经营者更容易受到经济冲击。我们的研究结果表明了新冠疫情如何加剧了移民和非移民群体在脆弱性方面的不平等,以及那些已融入当地的人群,包括移民和非移民,受疫情负面影响的可能性较小。