287 research outputs found
Gender en asiel
Terwijl de aandacht voor de achterstelling van vrouwen in de asielprocedure
de afgelopen decennia groeit, blijkt dat juist mannen hierin een kleinere slaagkans
hebben. Dit blijkt te maken te hebben met het traditionele gendermigratiepatroon
en de hieraan gekoppelde typering van mannen als calculerende gelukszoekers
en van vrouwen als slachtoffers van patriarchale overheersing
Between Choice and Stigma:Identifications of Economically Successful Migrants
In this contribution, we draw on the unusual but interesting comparison between ‘immigrants’ and ‘expats’, with the aim of scrutinizing identity construction and the tensions between stigma and identity of choice against the background of the (reluctant) superdiverse city of Rotterdam. We focus on two types of socioeconomically successful migrants which, despite their similarities in class position, are generally regarded as rather different. First, middle-class migrants and members of the second generation from ‘classic’ migration groups in the Netherlands (with roots in Surinam, Turkey and Morocco, including descendants of former guest workers). Second, expatriates or knowledge workers of various national backgrounds (including American, English, Indian, Chinese) who came to the Netherlands on a temporary basis because of their highly-skilled jobs (or the jobs of their partners, as we also included trailing spouses). We address the questions of how these migrants perceive themselves, how they think that others perceive them, and how discrepancies between these two affect their feelings of belonging in the city of Rotterdam and the Netherlands. Our findings suggest that while both ‘immigrants’ and ‘expatriates’ combine various identities, immigrants have more difficulty to adopt alternative identities (such as ‘cosmopolitan’) than expatriates because of their dominant label as ‘allochtoon’ (non-native Dutch).</p
Tackling the problem of regulatory pressure in Dutch elderly care
Regulatory pressure is widely recognized as a problem in healthcare. At first sight the solution seems simple: discard rules and give caregivers more resources to provide personalize
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