A scoping review of refugees’ employment integration experience and outcomes in Canada
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Refugees involuntarily arrive to Canada to escape unfavourable conditions in their home country. Employment is an important marker of integration and a foundational determinant of health yet; little is known about the employment integration experiences of refugees as a distinct group of workers in Canada.
OBJECTIVE:
This scoping review was completed to explore the employment experience and outcomes of refugees in Canada and to identify gaps in the literature.
METHODS:
Three databases were searched for peer-reviewed articles published in English over a 25-year period, 1993 to 2018, for research on refugees and employment in the Canadian context. The research team reviewed all articles, including abstract screening, full text review and data extraction; consensus on inclusion was reached for all articles. Relevant articles were synthesized for overarching themes.
RESULTS:
The search strategy identified 2,723 unique articles of which 16 were included in the final sample. There was a mix of quantitative, qualitative and mixed-methods studies which reported on employment rates of refugees, the quality of jobs secured, gendered differences in employment experience and differential impacts of under/unemployment on health and well-being.
CONCLUSION:
The findings suggest that refugees in Canada do not secure jobs that are in line with their previous skills and experience leading to downward occupational mobility and poorer health with refugee women experiencing these outcomes more acutely. Research in this area with long-term outcomes and contextualized experiences is needed, as well as studies that include equity considerations such as racialization and gender.
1Introduction
Refugees in Canada comprise an important facet of Canada’s humanitarian landscape. Compared with other immigrant groups who may chose to leave their country for positive reasons, refugees are not emigrating for economic reasons but rather to seek protection from a war-torn country and from fear of persecution. To date, Canada has welcomed and resettled over 1 million refugees with an influx of roughly 30,000 per year [1]. Refugees arrive primarily through three resettlement programs in Canada and are provided guaranteed income supports for the first year to cover start-up costs such as food, shelter and basic necessities [2]. After one year, refugees are expected to become self-sufficient which involves seeking out and finding work. Yet, this process has consistently been found to be challenging for any immigrant group but especially refugees. For example, across Canada’s western provinces, the unemployment rate for refugees ranged from a low of 5.5% in Alberta to nearly 30% in Saskatchewan [3]. These figures are higher compared to other immigrant categories and, in some cases, significantly greater when compared to the unemployment rate of Canadian-born workers (7.1% over the same time period) [4].
Several reasons have been offered for refugee’s employment-related challenges such as discounting of foreign credentials, lack of proficiency in English or French, lack of work experience in the country of arrival, and discrimination [5–9]. These challenges persist irrespective of refugee’s education and skill level forcing them to take on lower skilled and precarious jobs characterized by limited benefits, poorer working conditions, and low wages [10]. Longitudinal earnings data, for instance, show that refugees earned on average $22k CA in employment income two years’ post-arrival in 2014, which was twice as low as skilled immigrants, and with earnings only marginally increasing over time [11]. Estimates further suggest that the financial burden associated with the underutilization of immigrants and refugees’ skills may be costing Canada $50 billion or 2.5% of GDP [12].
While there is a developing body of literature about employment integration and outcomes of immigrants, there are limited reviews focusing on refugees as a distinct group of immigrants. This is especially true in the Canadian context where the employment experience of refugees is homogenized with other immigrant categories or considered alongside different settlement issues including health, housing, and overall satisfaction with life in Canada. Further, as the federal government gears up to fill crucial labour market gaps by welcoming immigrants at a rate of 1% of the Canadian population between 2021 and 2023 (a significant portion through the Economic Mobility Pathways Project for refugees), timely information is needed on refugees’ economic adaptation. Thus, this scoping review seeks to summarize what is known about the employment experience of refugees in Canada. Through this analysis, knowledge and research gaps will be identified to inform evidence needs for future studies.
2Methods
Scoping reviews are appropriate when there is limited knowledge on the topic of interest and is often used to identify the nature and range of research as well as identify critical evidence gaps. In contrast to systematic reviews, scoping reviews allow for a range of study designs, irrespective of study quality, in order to identify all relevant research. This review used a scoping review methodology as outlined by Arksey and O’Malley [13] and later refined by Levac et al. [14]. The search strategy employed an iterative process, and was guided by the primary question: “What is the current evidence base on the employment experience of refugees in Canada?”
2.1Systematic search
A search strategy of keywords, MeSH terminology and search strings were developed by the research team and in consultation with a trained librarian with expertise in conducting systematic reviews (see Table 1 for search terms). The search strategy was applied to PubMed, PsychINFO and Scopus via the OVID interface for articles published between January 1, 1993 and December 31, 2018. In addition to these sources, manual searches were undertaken on the reference lists of prior reviews on the topic area. Briefly, the keywords for the search strategy included employment, work, resettlement AND refugee* OR immigrant* combined with the term Canad* or the names of the Canadian provinces or territories.
Table 1
Database | Search strategy |
PubMed | 1. refugee* OR immigrant* OR newcomer* OR immigration OR resettlement OR migrant* OR asylum seeker* OR emigration and immigration OR emigrants and immigrants. 2. employment OR job OR work OR “economic integration” OR “labour force” OR “labor force” OR workforce OR workplace OR worker* OR occupation OR underemployment OR “occupational status”. 3. canada [tiab] OR canada [mesh] OR canadian [tiab] OR ontario [tiab] OR alberta [tiab] OR british columbia [tiab] OR saskatchewan [tiab] OR quebec [tiab] OR manitoba [tiab] OR new brunswick [tiab] OR nova scotia [tiab] OR newfoundland [tiab] OR prince edward island [tiab]. 4. Limit to (English language and year = “1993-Current”). |
PsychINFO | 1. Index terms: [immigration], [labour market], [job search], [working women], [salaries], [employment status] OR 2. Abstract/title: (refugee* OR immigrant* OR newcomer* OR immigration OR resettlement OR migrant* OR asylum seeker* OR emigration OR emigrants) AND (employment OR job OR work OR “economic integration” OR “labour force” OR “labor force” OR workforce OR workplace OR worker* OR occupation OR underemployment OR “occupational status” OR “unemployment” OR “labor market” OR “labour market” OR salaries OR “working women” OR “occupational aspirations”) AND (canada OR canadian OR ontario OR alberta OR british columbia OR saskatchewan OR quebec OR manitoba OR new brunswick OR nova scotia OR newfoundland OR prince edward island). 3. Limit to “peer review” and Year: 1993 to 2018. |
Scopus | 1. TITLE-ABS-KEY (“refugee*” OR “immigrant*” OR “newcomer*” OR “immigration” OR “resettlement” OR “migrant*” OR “asylum seeker*” OR “emigration” OR “emigrants*”) AND TITLE-ABS-KEY (“work” OR “job” OR “employment” OR “economic integration” OR “labour force” OR “labor force” OR “workforce” OR “workplace” OR “occupation” OR “worker*” OR “occupational status” OR “underemployment”) AND TITLE-ABS-KEY (“Canada” OR “canadian” OR “ontario” OR “british columbia” OR “manitoba” OR “saskatchewan” OR “quebec” OR “alberta” OR “newfoundland” OR “nova scotia” OR “prince edward island” OR “new brunswick”)) 2. OR/1. And TITLE (work). |
2.2Study selection
Relevant studies were imported to a reference manager (RefWorks) and duplicates were excluded. Studies were then assessed in two stages. First, titles and abstracts were independently reviewed by study authors against a set of inclusion and exclusion criteria. Studies were excluded if the population or subpopulation of interest did not include refugees, if the outcome did not include employment as either a primary or secondary focus of the study, or was conducted with children/youth sample (<18 years of age). Based on the language proficiency of the research team, only studies published in English were considered. Qualitative, quantitative or mixed-methods empirical research were eligible for inclusion while, reviews, commentaries and editorials were excluded.
Disagreements in this initial stage of screening were discussed by the research team to arrive at a consensus or else moved to full-text review. The study authors completed screening of eligible articles in the second phase, full-text review, using the same inclusion/exclusion criteria and, with an eye for completeness on key study elements before moving into data extraction.
2.3Data extraction
Two research team members (N.D. and T.K.) independently extracted data, which was checked by the lead author (S.S.) and compiled into one Excel sheet. Data extracted from each article focused on the study objective, design, setting, population and sample size, main employment-related findings as stated by the study authors, and additional findings of interest. Disagreements on final extracted studies were discussed by the research team. If agreement on whether to include a study could not be reached, the lead author appraised the study against included studies to reach a resolution.
2.4Data synthesis
Synthesis of relevant articles involved comparing and contrasting across articles for common themes around employment integration and outcomes of refugees in Canada. We further critically considered evidence gaps in this area that could inform future research.
3Results
The search resulted in 2,723 unique articles following deduplication in RefWorks (Fig. 1). We excluded most of the studies (n = 2,419) in the initial screening of titles and abstracts as these studies focused exclusively on immigrant populations with no distinction by refugee status. In total, 304 articles were read in full and assessed for relevance based on the inclusion criteria. Ultimately, 16 articles met the inclusion criteria for relevance, representing studies that took place in Canada on the employment experience of refugees. Four of the articles drew on data from the Refugee Resettlement Project [15–18] and two on the settlement experiences of refugees in Alberta [19, 20]. The remaining nine studies did not draw on data from a specific refugee resettlement project and/or research group.
Fig. 1
3.1Study characteristics
There was an equal distribution of studies published before 2005 and studies published more recently between 2006 and 2018 (Table 2). The majority of studies used quantitative survey designs (n = 8; 50%) [15–22], while five studies employed a qualitative research design including in-depth interviews and/or focus groups [23–26] and one using participant observation (ethnographic design) [27]. Three studies were not explicitly mixed methods but did use a combination of quantitative and qualitative methods [28–30].
Table 2
Author | Study name (if applicable) | Year | Study design | Sample size and refugee composition | Primary or secondary focus | Summary of refugee’s employment |
Beiser, Johnson, and Turner [13] | The Refugee Resettlement Project | 1993 | Quantitative – survey questionnaire | 1,348 participants at wave 1 (T1) and 1169 of the same individuals at wave 2 (T2) | Primary | At T1, 60% of refugees were employed, 14% unemployed, and 26% not available for work. Two years later, at T2, 59% employed, 34% unemployed and 7% not available. |
Sample: Southeast Asian refugees | Compared with people who were employed or not available for work, the unemployed scored higher on depressive effect. | |||||
The consistently employed had significantly lower depression scores than the consistently unemployed or the people who lose their jobs between T1 and T2 but not lower than the previously unemployed at T1 and found a job by T2. | ||||||
Beiser and Hou [14] | The Refugee Resettlement Project | 2000 | Quantitative – survey questionnaire | 1,348 participants at wave 1 (T1), 1169 of the same individuals at wave 2 (T2), and 647 participated in wave 3 (T3) | Primary | At the end of ten years in Canada, both men and women were more likely to be working consistently than at the end of their first two years. |
Sample: Southeast Asian refugees | Working women earned less (average salary $15,000 to $19,999 versus $20000 to $29,999 for men). | |||||
English ability was an important predictor of both employment and of income for women as well as for men. | ||||||
Johnson [15] | The Refugee Resettlement Project | 2000 | Quantitative – survey questionnaire | 90 participants | Primary | Refugees predominately started businesses in two sectors: 1) farming or greenhouse operations; 2) restaurant or food and beverage industries. |
Sample: Southeast Asian refugees | Self-employment was viewed favourably; 96% said their job used their skills, 98% agreed self employment helps people get ahead financially, 79% said if they were not in self-employment they would have less status, 91% were satisfied with the work they did, and 89% were satisfied with the income they received. | |||||
Beiser and Hou [16] | The Refugee Resettlement Project | 2001 | Quantitative – survey questionnaire | 608 participants | Primary | Unemployment would prove a contemporaneous as well as a predictive risk factor for depression. Although unemployment was significantly related to depression at waves 2 and 3, this effect was not observed at wave 1. |
Sample: Southeast Asian refugees | There was no discernable effect of antecedent unemployment on depression at subsequent waves of interview. Hypothesis 3, suggesting that depression has a feedback relationship on unemployment and English ability, received only partial support. Depression levels at wave 1 increased the probability of unemployment at wave 2, but had no predictive effects on English language proficiency. | |||||
Language fluency was associated with increased probability of employment at waves 2 and 3. | ||||||
Krahn et al. [17] | Settlement experiences of refugees in Alberta | 2000 | Quantitative – survey | 525 participants | Primary | 82% of refugees had held a paying job at some point after arriving in Canada but mostly in blue collar jobs and 28% employed in part-time jobs. |
Sample: Range of refugees arriving from former Yugoslavia (63%), Middle East (17%), Central America (9%), African countries (6%), Southeast Asia (3%), Poland (2%) | Strong education to job mismatch. For example, three out of four refugees were not able to return to managerial/professional employment after coming to Canada. | |||||
Lamba [18] | Settlement experiences of refugees in Alberta | 2003 | Quantitative – survey | 525 participants | Primary | Refugees’ performance in the labour market is largely not determined by their prior education or work experience, or by additional human capital (e.g. time invested in ESL) acquired in Canada. |
Sample: Range of source countries including Africa, Central/South America, East Asia, former Yugoslavia, the Middle East and Poland | Impact of network ties (e.g. living close to family, having a spouse, children in the household) on quality of employment is more important. | |||||
Carter and Osborne [20] | A Winnipeg case study | 2009 | Qualitative – one on one interviews and two focus groups | 3 waves between 2006–2008; 75 households in initial year (representing 300 people), 55 re-interviewed in second year, 39 in third year | Secondary | The percentage of households with at least one person employed full time, increased from 49 to 72%. However, jobs were not commensurate with education or skill level (38% arrived with some university education, one-quarter had college or trade certificates, however, 80% were still working in sales and services in the third year, 15% in construction and manufacturing and only two employees were in professional positions). |
Sample: Refugees from Africa and Middle East (70%), Latin America (16%), and Asian and Pacific countries (10%) | 39% of the interviewees who had looked for work during year three still reported difficulty finding a job because of language problems, lack of job experience and/or references in Canada, and credential recognition problems. | |||||
Their unskilled positions, with limited earning potential, restricted improvements in housing. | ||||||
Connor Schisler and Polatajko [27] | 2002 | Qualitative – ethnography and in-depth interviews | 8 participants | Secondary | Participants who were employed in Burundi are unemployed in Canada and dissatisfied with this. | |
Sample: Burundian refugees | Identified common barriers (e.g., credentials, work experience). Some volunteered to mediate challenges. | |||||
Changes in productive occupation resulted in changed perceptions of self, both positive and negative. | ||||||
Danso [28] | 2001 | Quantitative survey and qualitative semi-structured interviews | 115 participants with 10 key informant interviews | Secondary | High unemployment (38%) and underemployment (69%). Many were hopeful to find well-paid jobs and practice in their area of professional training but faced barriers (53% experienced discrimination). | |
Sample: Ethiopian and Somali refugees | 15% complained about insufficient income and jobs secured were typically blue-collar. | |||||
Fang, Sapeha and Neil [24] | 2018 | Qualitative – in-depth interviews | 83 participants | Primary | Most respondents had a general plan to start a career (in careers they had in home country). Women preferred to stay at home and care for family. | |
Sample: 42 Syrian refugees and 41 non-Syrian refugees from various countries (Sudan, Eritrea, Congo, Iraq, Palestine, Nigeria, Liberia and Sierra Leone) | Those employed, worked in low-wage service sector jobs. Common barriers include human capital (language proficiency, childcare, credential recognition) while social capital (friends, community involvement) facilitated job search. | |||||
Most suggested better job opportunities in large cities such as Toronto or Montreal. | ||||||
Hyndman and McLean [29] | 2006 | Quantitative survey and qualitative focus groups | 70 survey participants and 47 focus group participants | Secondary | Language reported as the most difficult challenge when accessing employment. | |
Sample: Acehnese refugees | Available jobs were precarious and low-paid and meant sacrificing language studies. | |||||
Smith, Chen and Mustard [21] | 2009 | Quantitative – Longitudinal Survey of Immigrants to Canada (LSIC) | 4331 respondents in wave 2 and 4238 in wave 3 | Primary | In unadjusted (OR = 3.94, 95% CI 3.08–5.05) and adjusted models (OR = 2.90, 95% CI 2.10–4.01), refugees were more likely to be employed in occupations with higher physical demands than they had before coming to Canada. | |
Sample: Sample restricted to respondents who had worked before immigrating to Canada and who were re-interviewed in wave 2 and wave 3 | ||||||
Sample: Southeast Asian refugees | There was no discernable effect of antecedent unemployment on depression at subsequent waves of interview. Hypothesis 3, suggesting that depression has a feed-back relationship on unemployment and English ability, received only partial support. Depression levels at wave 1 increased the probability of unemployment at wave 2, but had no predictive effects on English language proficiency. | |||||
Hanley et al. [30] | 2018 | Quantitative survey and qualitative field notes | 697 participants | Secondary | 30% of participants were employed. Among those who work, the majority received help from Syrian/Arab friends (35%) or family to find a job (23%). | |
Sample: Syrian refugees | ||||||
Doyle, Mooney and Ku [25] | 2006 | Qualitative – focus groups | 23 participants | Primary | Many participants were unemployed and cited systemic discrimination (work experience, credentials, language and accent) as well as lack of social networks and feeling unwelcomed by the host community. | |
Sample: Immigrant and refugee women from various countries (Afghanistan, Algeria, Canary Islands, China, Columbia, Democratic Republic of Congo, Iran, Iraq, Kosovo, Tunisia) | Participants suggested better job opportunities elsewhere. | |||||
Jackson and Bauder [26] | 2013 | Qualitative – interviews | 17 participants | Primary | All participants worked in one of four industries once in Canada (construction, cleaning, general labour, and food preparation) that were not commensurate with their background and which were typically temporary or part-time. | |
Sample: Refugee claimants from a number of source countries including El Salvador, Mexico, Columbia | Encountered several intersecting barriers (language, credential, devalued work experience, etc.). | |||||
Strong desire to find a job versus rely on welfare as employment perceived as tied to citizenship. | ||||||
Chen, Smith and Mustard [22] | 2010 | Quantitative – Longitudinal Survey of Immigrants to Canada (LSIC) | 2,685 respondents of which 72 were refugees | Primary | Over-qualification based on experience in their current job in Canada was more common among refugees. | |
Sample: Sample restricted to immigrants who were working at 4 years after their arrival in Canada | There was an elevated risk of mental health problems relative to over-qualification among refugees (OR range 1.93, 95% CI 1.19–3.13 to 2.03, 95% CI 1.25–3.30). |
Employment experience and outcomes were the primary objective in eleven studies. These articles discussed the under- and unemployment rates of refugees [19, 22–25], quality of jobs available and secured [17, 19–21, 23–25] as well as the bi-directional effects of employment and other common settlement issues such as mental health and language acquisition [15–17, 22]. For the remaining articles, employment was a secondary focus. Here, the main focus of studies was on integration experiences of refugees overall and included employment as one aspect of integration [23, 27–30].
Finally, the samples in half of the studies were focused on specific ethnic groups including four studies of Southeast Asian refugees [15–18] and one study each focusing on Burundian refugees [27], Ethiopian and Somalian refugees [28], Acehnese refugees [29], and Syrian refugees [30]. The remaining seven studies included a diverse range of refugees across different countries.
3.2Summary of key findings
The following section provides details on key findings across the studies related to the employment experience of refugees in Canada.
3.2.1Employment not commensurate with refugees’ skills and background
Nearly all of the included studies described trends in refugee’s employment since arrival to Canada. Employment rates varied and were as low as 30% in one study [30] and as high as 82% in another [19]. However, the positions secured were often precarious (part-time, temporary) and were not commensurate with a refugee’s educational background or work experience from their native country. Not surprisingly, common barriers to securing decent jobs were lack of language proficiency, credential recognition, Canadian work experience, and employment-related discrimination [19, 20, 23–29] which led to unskilled positions. Four studies found that the majority of refugees were working in sales and service positions even though a significant proportion had arrived with post-secondary education and held professional occupations in their home country [19, 20, 23, 26]. Other studies found that some refugees had a desire to pursue further education and training [24, 29] or participate in volunteer and/or extracurricular activities [27] to mediate their labour market shortcomings. Another article contrasted refugees’ expectations of employment in Canada and found that the vast majority of refugees (84%) were disappointed with opportunities that did not align with the ‘rosy picture of Canada as a land of opportunities and equalities’ [28]. Further, across studies, unskilled jobs were commonly associated with limited earning potential which affected other aspects of integration including housing affordability [23] but also forced refugees to rely on social assistance beyond the one year of guaranteed government income supports [24, 26–28].
Opposite labour market barriers, social support networks emerged in a few studies as having a direct influence on helping refugees find a job [20, 30]. Particularly, refugees who used friends and family to find a job were likely to have a greater quality of employment [20] while another study noted that social networks in the job market elicited a form of discrimination in that refugees without these connections had fewer opportunities to find a job [24].
3.2.2Gender differences in employment
A small number of included studies compared gender differences in employment outcomes of newly arrived refugees [16, 18, 19, 24] while other studies adjusted for the effect of gender [20, 21] and one study focused specifically on women [25]. Across these studies, a general trend emerged where employment rates for refugee women were lower than for refugee men even as length of time in Canada increased. One study attributed this to lower English language proficiency among refugee women [16] while another found that women expressed their preference to stay at home and take care of their family rather than pursue employment [24]. In the study focusing on women (to note, authors interviewed immigrant and refugee women with no distinction between the two groups), participants expressed frustration at not being able to find work and linked this unemployment to their identity as a newcomer but also their identity as a woman which is often devalued compared to a man. As well, living in a small province (New Brunswick, Canada) was further described as limiting job opportunities compared with larger metropolitan cities [25]. Conversely, one study on resettled refugees in Alberta, Canada, found the opposite trend where refugee men experienced greater downward occupational mobility when compared to refugee women. Specifically, refugee men were more likely to occupy blue-collar jobs on arrival in Canada while women were employed in upper status occupations likely as a result of higher education [19].
3.2.3Employment conditions and health
Studies addressing working conditions reported differences in work-related exposures [21] and adverse associations with mental health and well-being [15, 18, 22]. Longitudinal survey data from Canada reported that, both 2 and 4 years after arrival, refugees were more likely to be employed in occupations with greater physical demands compared with their jobs prior to arrival in Canada [21]. Using the same survey data, additional analyses found that refugees experiencing any dimension of over-qualification (on education, experience or expectation) were significantly more likely to report a decline in mental health [22]. Further, studies across The Refugee Resettlement Project, found that refugees who were chronically or newly unemployed experienced higher depression levels compared with stably employed and refugees who found jobs between each study time period [15] and, the inclusion of English language proficiency mediated probability of employment anddepression [18].
4Discussion
The evidence presented in this scoping review suggests that refugees have a subpar experience with the labour market in Canada. A variety of factors, including labour market barriers (language proficiency, lack of Canadian work experience, social support), gender roles, and over-qualification were found to be associated with unemployment, low prestige occupations (e.g., precarious, low waged) as well as adverse affects on health and well-being. These findings are consistent with existing integration models used in migrant research where employment is considered an objective functional outcome that is influenced by a variety of conditions [31, 32]. However, unlike other immigrant groups, refugees may experience these challenges more acutely as their life course and transitions to foreign labour markets are chaotic and unplanned including traumatic experiences of displacement and life in refugee camps and neighbouring countries, the lengthy process to seek asylum in a different country, and long-term disruptions in education and career [32–34].
In many of the reviewed studies, refugees described the arduous transition to a new country and being grateful for the opportunity to seek protection but, disappointed in job options and opportunities for career advancement especially in the case of refugees with post-secondary education or higher. Identified strategies to mediate labour market shortcomings appear to be similar to those of other refugee populations globally such as accessing social networks [35], further training including improving language skills or volunteering [36, 37], as well as career adaptability to other avenues of income earning such as entrepreneurship [38]. The benefits of volunteering have been found to be more beneficial towards social than economic integration [39] while entrepreneurship presents the opportunity for both social and economic integration [40]. Despite these efforts, however, refugees’ disadvantage in the initial resettlement period impacted other key aspects of integration including housing and day-to-day expenses necessitating the need for income supports beyond the guaranteed one year. Research on income earning and earning trajectories over time in fact highlight that compared with economic immigrants, refugees earn roughly 10k to 15k CA less on arrival, reaching parity with other immigrant groups about five years later [41].
In our view, one of the key challenges to employment integration of refugees moves beyond these individual-level barriers to systemic inequities in service and program provision. Particularly, it is now being recognized that settlement services and programs provided to newcomers and especially refugees are focused on deskilled and feminized jobs (in the case of refugee women) rather than a focus on skilled programs geared toward labour market needs [42]. This is because refugees have historically been considered as inferior to Canadian-born counterparts and our institutional and public policies and practices have been structured in ways to limit their economic opportunities [43]. While studies in this review did not directly examine systemic inequities, the outcomes of precarious employment and low wages point to differential treatment of refugee groups. In order to provide a better understanding of refugee’s employment integration, we argue that future research should critically consider these upstream determinants and the intersection of determinants in order to inform appropriate interventions in these systems that are suited to the needs, skills, and backgrounds of refugees.
A second finding of this review revealed that the employment experiences of refugee women were more pronounced compared with their male counterparts. Particularly, refugee women described greater difficulty navigating the job search process in Canada and competing demands in and outside the home that interfered with employment. The experiences of double day, when unskilled paid employment and domestic responsibilities intersect, have been well documented in the literature broadly among immigrant groups [44–46]. It is potentially harder, however, for refugee women to take up an identity of income earner when, in their family, that role had traditionally been occupied by men. In the reviewed studies, traditional gender roles were evidenced through presence of young children in the household and poor quality of employment for women versus men as well as delaying employment till children were older while refugee men were more concerned with securing any type of job likely to maintain their breadwinner role. Apart from one study [19], the instances where refugee women arrived with a post-secondary education or prior work experience yet remained under- or unemployed point to potential unconscious biases in recruitment and onboarding of refugee women by employers. Particularly, new research suggests that employers hold gender and cultural stereotypes of refugee women as unviable in the labour market even though gender and ethnic diverse organizations outperform organizations with dissimilar workforces [47, 48]. Recommendations put forth suggest the need for unconscious bias training within organizations and alternative recruitment strategies (e.g. work placements, task-based interviews) although effectiveness of these activities remain relatively unmeasured.
Finally, only a few studies addressed the physical working environment of refugee workers and health consequences related to employment status and work conditions. Typically, health consequences may manifest over time and are harder to investigate, partially explaining the lack of studies in this area. As well, the experiences of refugees’ working conditions and occupational health are often homogenized with immigrants [49, 50] preventing us from assessing differential experiences for refugees. While two studies in this review [21, 22] did overarchingly look at immigrants’ working conditions, they stratified results by immigrant classification highlighting greater physical demands in job tasks for refugees, potentially placing them at greater risk for work-related injuries and illnesses. And, the limited research exclusively focusing on refugee employment and health found an association between under- and unemployment and mental distress, consistent with two previous reviews [51, 52]. Possible explanations for these results are varied. First, refugees may focus on ‘survival jobs’, characterized by increased precarity and hazardous work conditions [53], on arrival as a source of income which may impede upward occupational mobility and contribute to deteriorating health. Second, refugees with higher education levels than those with lower levels of education may experience a greater gap between their job outcomes and expectations contributing to feelings of frustration, resentment and lower life satisfaction [54]. Lastly, traumatic and stressful experiences pre-migration (from time spent in refugee camps and neighbouring countries, family displacement) can influence job search processes and opportunities [55], reinforcing the association between employment and mental health and well-being.
4.1Gaps in the literature and recommendations for future research
The review evidence highlights several directions to strengthen the body of literature on employment integration and outcomes of refugees in Canada with the aim of informing appropriate employment-related programs and services. Most studies tangentially explored refugee’s employment to describe poor quality jobs that do not commensurate with pre-migration employment while social (e.g. lack of affordable childcare) and structural barriers (e.g. settlement agency programs and services) that interact to shape employment outcomes for refugees and by gender for refugee men compared to women were seldom examined. Qualitative research may be better focused to disentangle and expand on these intersections and should be considered as seen in research on employment in immigrant groups [44]. Employment as the primary outcome of interest comprised 70 percent of included studies however, half of these drew on data from the same research projects and the scope of research was somewhat dated. More up-to-date and longitudinal research is needed to understand the long-term situations of newly arriving refugees as well as comparisons between streams of refugees over time. Particularly, the review found no studies comparing the economic situations of government sponsored (GARs), privately sponsored (PSRs), blended visa office-referred (BVORs) and refugee claimants (RCs) which is surprising given that each stream receives different sources of funding and funding structures. Briefly, GARs receive one year of financial support from the federal government through the Resettlement Assistance Program, PSRs are supported entirely by private sponsoring groups (this includes community sponsors such as settlement organizations, groups of five Canadian citizens), BVORs receive joint support from the government and private sponsors, and RCs arrive to Canada without any support and are eligible to receive a work or study permit while awaiting a decision on their claim [2]. There is also a need to expand on equity considerations such that research include interview and survey data with non-English speaking participants and racialized refugee workers from cultural minorities beyond Southeast Asia or Yugoslavia. Refugees from India, Mexico, Nigeria, and Iran, for instance, are among the top 10 permanent residents admitted to Canada from non-Western countries over the past decade [56] however no studies focused on these groups. Given that language is one of the biggest barriers to job obtainment and country of origin is known to influence human capital and other resources important in the host country, these equity considerations should be adopted in research to provide contextualized experiences. Lastly, only one study [28] included service providers as participants. Service providers including settlement agency workers and employment counselors work closely with newcomer populations and possess a wealth of knowledge concerning the challenges refugees may face in securing employment and can speak to best practices that may mitigate labour market shortcomings [57, 58]. Thus, future research should consider inclusion of these knowledge providers and users either separately or in combination with refugees to better understand employment challenges and how best to overcome them.
4.2Strengths and limitations
To the best of our knowledge, this is the first review to explore the employment experience and outcomes of refugees in the Canadian context. However, the findings from this review should be considered in light of a few limitations. First, the review employed a scoping review protocol to characterize the existing evidence on refugees’ employment rather than a systemic review protocol which would have allowed us to critically appraise the evidence base. The identification and abstraction of literature did however follow procedures identified as good practice including dual independent screeners and verification of data abstraction. Second, the selection of articles in English and inclusion criteria of peer-reviewed studies may have led us to overlook grey literature published in reports, books or websites on this topic. Third, the focus on the Canadian context may limit generalizability to other jurisdictions with different immigration systems, policies, and services to help refugees economically adapt yet, other systematic reviews on migrant working conditions across similar economic structures (e.g. Europe) have found parallel results [49, 59] suggesting some level of comparability. Lastly, the review found heterogeneity of methodology used in included studies, differences in sample size, ethnic groups of interest, and assessment of employment experience and outcomes which may limit our ability to compare and combine findings. The findings presented are hence a summary of key themes and selection of information and knowledge across the studies to draw conclusions about refugee’s employment experience in Canada.
5Conclusion
There is a limited evidence based on refugee’s resettlement experiences in Canada and an even smaller focus on economic integration. This scoping review sought to fill this knowledge gap and contribute to our understanding of refugee’s employment experience including barriers and challenges to securing safe and decent work and intersections of gender and health. The scope of included studies suggests that refugees potentially occupy employment positions at the lowest echelon in the Canadian labour market contributing to low earnings, minimal opportunities for career advancement and lower perceived mental and physical health. It is possible that employment conditions improve as length of time in Canada increases, but longitudinal outcomes are seldom assessed to make a meaningful conclusion. More work should be done to assess the long-term economic outcomes of refugees as well as factors outside those identified here that intersect to disadvantage or facilitate employment integration.
Funding
The authors did not receive support from any organization for the submitted work.
Conflict of interest
The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare that are relevant to the content of this article.
Code availability
Data sharing is not applicable as no data was generated or analysed.
Author contributions
SS designed and implemented the research. All authors contributed to the analysis of peer-reviewed articles for inclusion in the review. SS drafted the manuscript and ND and TK provided critical reviews. All authors approved the final manuscript.
Ethics approval
Not applicable.
Informed consent
Not applicable.
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank the University of Waterloo librarian, Jackie Stapleton, for her support on the database searches and Julia Goyal for her contribution to title and abstract screening.
References
[1] | The UN Refugee Agency. Are refugees good for Canada? A look at Canadian refugee integration. Available from https://www.unhcr.ca/in-canada/refugee-statistics/. |
[2] | Senthanar S , MacEachen E , Premji S , Bigelow P . Employment integration experiences of Syrian refugee arriving through Canada’s varied refugee protection programs. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies. (2020) ;47: (3):575–95. |
[3] | Wilkinson L , Garcea J , Bucklaschuk J . 2015 Western Canadian settlement survey final report. Ottawa: CIC, (2015) . |
[4] | Statistics Canada. Labour force survey, December 2012, The Daily. 2013. Available from https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/en/daily-quotidien/130104/dq130104a-eng.pdf?st=QgX_qw8i. |
[5] | Houle R , Yssaad L . Recognition of newcomers’ foreign credentials and work experience. Statistics Canada, (2010) . |
[6] | LaRochelle-Côté S , Hango DW . Overqualification, skills and job satisfaction. Insights on Canadian Society Catalogue. Statistics Canada: 75-006-X, (2016) . |
[7] | Premji S , Messing K , Lippel K . Broken English, broken bones? Mechanisms linking language proficiency and occupational health in a Montreal garment factory. International Journal of Health Services: Planning, Administration, Evaluation. (2008) ;38: :1–19. |
[8] | Oreopoulos P , Dechief D . Why do some employers prefer to interview Mathew, but not Samir? New evidence from Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver. Vancouver Metropolis British Columbia: Centre of Excellence for Research on Immigration and Diversity, (2011) . |
[9] | Sienkiewicz HC , Mauceri KG , Howell EC , Bibeau DL . Untapped resources: Refugee employment experiences in Central North Carolina. Work-a Journal of Prevention Assessment & Rehabilitation. (2013) ;45: (1):17–24. |
[10] | Fuller S . Do pathways matter? Linking early immigrant employment sequences and later economic outcomes: Evidence from Canada. International Migration Review. (2015) ;49: :355–405. |
[11] | Statistics Canada. Table 43-10-0010-01 Immigrant income by admission year and immigrant admission category, Canada and provinces. doi: https://doi.org/10.25318/4310001601-eng. |
[12] | Agopsowicz A , Ochieng-Billy R . Untapped potential: Canada needs to close its immigrant wage gap. RBC Royal Bank of Canada Economics Report. 2020. Available from https://www.rbccm.com/assets/rbccm/docs/news/2019/untapped-potential.pdf. |
[13] | Arksey H , O’Malley L . Scoping studies: Towards a methodological framework. International Journal of Social Research Methodology. (2005) ;8: (1):19–32. |
[14] | Levac D , Colquhoun H , O’Brien KK . Scoping studies: Advancing the methodology. Implementation Science. (2010) ;5: (1):69. |
[15] | Beiser M , Johnson PJ , Turner RJ . Unemployment, underemployment and depressive affect among Southeast Asian refugees. Psychological Medicine. (1993) ;23: :731–43. |
[16] | Beiser M , Hou F . Gender differences in language acquisition and employment consequences among Southeast Asian refugees in Canada. Canadian Public Policy. (2000) ;26: (3):311–30. |
[17] | Johnson PJ . Ethnic differences in self-employment among Southeast Asian refugees in Canada. Journal of Small Business Management. (2000) ;38: (4):78–86. |
[18] | Beiser M , Hou F . Language acquisition, unemployment and depressive disorder among Southeast Asian refugees: A 10-year study. Social Science & Medicine. (2001) ;53: :1321–34. |
[19] | Krahn L , Derwing T , Mulder M , Wilkinson L . Educated and underemployed: Refugee integration into the Canadian labour market. Journal of International Migration and Integration. (2000) ;1: (1):59–84. |
[20] | Lamba NK . The employment experiences of Canadian refugees: Measuring the impact of human and social capital on quality of employment. Canadian Review of Sociology. (2003) ;40: (1):45–64. |
[21] | Smith PM , Chen C , Mustard C . Differential risk of employment in more physically demanding jobs among a recent cohort of immigrants to Canada. Injury Prevention. (2009) ;15: :252–8. |
[22] | Chen C , Smith PM , Mustard C . The prevalence of over-qualification and its association with health status among occupationally active new immigrants to Canada. Ethnicity & Health. (2010) ;15: (6):601–19. |
[23] | Carter TS , Osborne J . Housing and neighbourhood challenges of refugee resettlement in declining inner city neighbourhoods: A Winnipeg case study. Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies. (2009) ;7: (3):308–27. |
[24] | Fang T , Sapeha H , Neil K . Integration and retention of refugees in smaller communities. International Migration. (2018) ;56: :83–99. |
[25] | Doyle J , Mooney N , Ku J . Why not me? Women immigrants and unemployment in New Brunswick. Migration Letters. (2006) ;3: :161–9. |
[26] | Jackson S , Bauder H . Neither temporary, nor permanent: The precarious employment experiences of refugee claimants in Canada. Journal of Refugee Studies. (2014) ;27: :360–80. |
[27] | Connor Schisler AM , Polatajko HJ . The individual as mediator of the person-occupation-environment interaction: Learning from the experience of refugees. Journal of Occupational Science. (2002) ;9: :82–92. |
[28] | Danso R . From ‘there’ to ‘here’: An investigation of the initial settlement experiences of Ethiopian and Somali refugees in Toronto. Geo Journal. (2001) ;55: :3–14. |
[29] | Hyndman J , McLean J . Settling like a state: Acehnese refugees in Vancouver. Journal of Refugee Studies. (2006) ;19: :345–60. |
[30] | Hanley J , Al Mhamied A , Cleveland J , Hajjar O , Hassan G , Ives N , et al. The social networks, social support and social capital of Syrian refugees privately sponsored to settle in Montreal: Indications for employment and housing during their early experiences of integration. Canadian Ethnic Studies. (2018) ;50: :123–49. |
[31] | Ager A , Strang A . Understanding integration: A conceptual framework. Journal of Refugee Studies. (2008) ;21: :166–91. |
[32] | Hynie M , Korn A , Tao D . Social context and social integration for government assisted refugees in Ontario, Canada. In PoteetM, NourpanahS, (Eds.). After the flight: The dynamics of refugee settlement and integration. Newcastle Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars, (2016) . |
[33] | Bruno A . US Refugee Resettlement Assistance. 2011. Washington, DC: Congressional Research Service. https://fas.org/sgp/crs/row/R41570.pdf. |
[34] | Neupane DR . Finding a New Job in a New Home: The Labour Market Experiences of Government Assisted Refugees in Canada. 2012. Major Research Paper, Immigration and Settlement Studies, Ryerson University. https://digital.library.ryerson.ca/islandora/object/RULA%3A1510/datastream/OBJ/view. |
[35] | Gericke D , Burmeister A , Löwe J , Deller J , Pundt L . How do refugees use their social capital for successful labor market integration? An exploratory analysis in Germany. Journal of Vocational Behavior. (2018) . |
[36] | Baranik LE , Hurst CS , Eby LT . The stigma of being a refugee: A mixed method study of refugees’ experiences of vocational stress. Journal of Vocational Behavior. (2018) . |
[37] | Ivlevs A , Veliziotis M . Beyond conflict: Long-term labour market integration of internally displaced persons in post-socialist countries. Journal of Vocational Behavior. (2017) . |
[38] | Obschonka M , Hahn E , Bajwa NH . Personal agency in newly arrived refugees: The role of personality, entrepreneurial cognitions and intentions, and career adaptability. Journal of Vocational Behavior. (2018) . |
[39] | Wilson-Forsberg S , Sethi B . The volunteering dogma and canadian work experience: Do recent immigrants volunteer voluntarily? Canadian Ethnic Studies. (2015) ;47: (3):91. |
[40] | Senthanar S , MacEachen E , Premji S , Bigelow P . Entrepreneurial experiences of Syrian refugee women in Canada: A feminist grounded qualitative study. Special Issue Small Business Economics: Small Firms in a Modern Working Life. (2021) ;57: (2):835–47. |
[41] | Capps R , Newland K , Fratzke S , Susannah G , Auclair G , Fix M , et al. Integrating refugees in the United States: The successes and challenges of resettlement in a global context. Statistical Journal of the IAOS. (2015) ;31: (3):341–67. |
[42] | Suto M . Compromised careers: The occupational transition of immigration and resettlement. Work-a Journal of Prevention Assessment & Rehabilitation. (2008) ;32: (4):417–29. |
[43] | Williams MT , Roy AK , MacIntyre M-P , Faber S . The traumatizing impact of racism in Canadians of colour. Curr Trauma Rep. (2022) ;8: :17–34. |
[44] | Premji S , Shakya Y . Pathways between under/unemployment and health among racialized immigrant women in Toronto. Ethnicity & Health. (2017) ;22: :17–35. |
[45] | Reid C , Ledrew RA . The burden of being employable: Underpaid and unpaid work and women’s health. Journal of Women and Social Work. (2013) ;28: :79–93. |
[46] | Oxman-Martinez J , Hanley J , Lach L , Khanlou N , Weerasinghe S , Agnew V . Intersection of Canadian policy parameters affecting women with precarious immigrant status: A baseline for understanding barriers to health. Journal of Immigrant Health. (2005) ;7: :247–58. |
[47] | Harmony Alliance. A Strategic Approach to Improving Employment Outcomes of Women from Migrant and Refugee Backgrounds in Australia. http://harmonyalliance.org.au/wpcontent/uploads/2019/11/Empoyment-Outcomes-of-Women-from-Migrant-and-RefugeeBackgrounds.pdf (2019) . |
[48] | Ziersch A , Due C , Howe J , Walsh M , Miller E , Flavel J . Pathways to employment for social inclusion, health and wellbeing for women from refugee backgrounds. Flinders University, Adelaide, (2022) . |
[49] | Sterud T , Tynes T , Mehlum S , Veiersted KB , Bergbom B , Airila A , et al. A systematic review of working conditions and occupational health among immigrants in Europe and Canada. BMC Public Health. (2018) ;18: :770. |
[50] | Lay AM , Kosny A , Aery A , Flecker K , Smith PM . The occupational heath and safety vulnerability of recent immigrants accessing settlement services. Canadian Journal of Public Health. (2018) ;109: :303–11. |
[51] | Nielsen SS , Krasnik A . Poorer self-perceived health among migrants and ethnic minorities versus the majority population in Europe: A systematic review. International Journal of Public Health. (2010) ;55: (5):357–71. |
[52] | Lindert J , Ehrenstein OS , Priebe S , Mielck A , Brähler E . Depression and anxiety in labor migrants and refugees – a systematic review and metaanalysis. Social Science Medicine. (2009) ;69: (2):246–57. |
[53] | Noack A , Vosko L . Precarious jobs in Ontario: Mapping dimensions of labour market insecurity by workers’ social location and context. Toronto, Ontario: Law Commission of Ontario, (2011) . |
[54] | Bridekirk J , Hynie M , SyRIA.lth . The impact of education and employment quality on self-rated mental health among syrian refugees in Canada. Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health. (2021) ;23: :290–7. |
[55] | Lee ES , Szkudlarek B , Nguyen DC , Nardon L . Unveiling the canvas ceiling: A multidisciplinary literature review of refugee employment and workforce integration. Int J Manag Review. (2020) ;22: (2):193–216. |
[56] | Statista. Top 10 origin countries of persons claiming refugee status in Canada. 2019. Available from https://www.statista.com/statistics/549366/top-10-origin-countries-of-refugee-claimants-in-canada/. |
[57] | Shields J , Drolet J , Valenzuela K . Immigrant settlement and integration services and the role of non-profit services providers: A cross-national perspective on trends, issues and evidence. Toronto: Ryerson Centre for Immigration & Settlement, (2016) . |
[58] | Thomas J . Teaching somebody to fish: Implications for immigrant-serving organizations and employment in Edmonton and Winnipeg. Canadian Ethnic Studies. (2015) ;47: (1):157–77. |
[59] | Gray BJ , Grey CNB , Hookway A , Homolova L , Davies AR . Difference in the impact of precarious employment on health across population subgroups: A scoping review. Perspectives in Public Health. (2021) ;141: (1):37–49. |