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Migration and Health in Nowhereland - Access of Undocumented Migrants to Work and Health Care in Europe

Health - Work - Familiy - Housing - Policy - Transnationalism
BuchKartoniert, Paperback
215 Seiten
Englisch
omninumerschienen am27.01.2012

Produkt

Details
ISBN/GTIN978-3-99031-000-7
ProduktartBuch
EinbandartKartoniert, Paperback
Verlag
ErscheinungslandÖsterreich
Erscheinungsjahr2012
Erscheinungsdatum27.01.2012
Seiten215 Seiten
SpracheEnglisch
Gewicht355 g
Illustrationen21 math. Diagramme, 39 Tabellen
Artikel-Nr.17278219

Inhalt/Kritik

Inhaltsverzeichnis
Executive SummaryIntroductionUNDOCUMENTED MIGRANTSMigration in Europe and Undocumented Migrants (Gudrun Biffl)Definitions and Methods of Estimation of Undocumented Migrants (Gudrun Biffl)Sources of Irregularity: The Social Construction of Irregular Migration (Gudrun Biffl)HEALTH AND MIGRATION IN EUROPEAccess to Health Care in the European Union (Gudrun Biffl)Health Services for Undocumented Migrants in Europe: An Overview (Friedrich Altenburg)Policy towards Undocumented Migrants of the EU27 (Carin Björngren-Cuadra)LANDSCAPES OF NOWHERELANDSituation of Undocumented Migrants in Selected EU Member States (Friedrich Altenburg)GOOD PRACTICE EXAMPLESGood Practice Examples of Health Care Provision for UDMs (Friedrich Altenburg, Gudrun Biffl)VOICES OF UNDOCUMENTED MIGRANTSThe Voices of Undocumented Migrants (Friedrich Altenburg, Gudrun Biffl)CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONSmehr
Leseprobe
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY[excerpt]. In this book we do not only wish to draw attention to the need of improving health protection for irregular migrants for their own sake, but also for the sake of the public health of the community in general. Thus, the aim of the book is to inform policymakers, practitioners and researchers about the multi-faceted state of undocumented migrants in order to speed up appropriate legislative and institutional reforms to deal with their needs.Currently, some 32 million foreign citizens reside in the European Union, of whom some 1.9 to 3.8 million are undocumented migrants. The most important pull factors are prospects of work, family reunion and chain migration. This explains the increasing difficulty for EU-MS to control migration flows, as human rights regulations protect the right to family. In addition, the right to refuge continues to be a strong element justifying immigration to Europe. The countries of origin of irregular migrants tend to be the same as those of regular migrants; they also tend to follow the same routes, using transnational community networks. Moreover, the changing pattern of origin countries of asylum seekers increases the ethnic and cultural diversity of this group of migrants.We also draw attention to the increasing inequality in health outcomes, measured by life expectancy, mortality, morbidity and self-assessed health in the European Union. This is not the consequence of a deterioration in the performance of health systems generally, but rather of the increasing disparity in socio-economic status and the widening of the social hierarchy in the various EU Member States. In general, people - especially males - in Central and Eastern Europe live shorter lives and spend more years of their lives in ill health. Southern European countries tend to have large health inequalities by educational attainment level, while countries like France, Germany and Austria tend to have the smallest ones. The Scandinavian welfare model, in contrast, has higher educational health inequality than the Anglo-Saxon model countries, except for Sweden, where differences are quite small. Health risks vary across occupational tasks and industries, accounting for different accident rates and health problems of certain occupational groups of workers. In some of the more risky jobs, migrant workers tend to be overrepresented, contributing to their higher morbidity and accident rates. Irregular migrants, particularly those with traumatic experiences in the source countries and along the migration route, tend to have a high incidence of mental health problems.Furthermore, a chapter in the book takes a "rights" approach in characterising the various EU-MS by the access rights of irregular migrants to health systems, differentiating between three categories - those granting minimum rights, those granting less than minimum rights, and those granting more than minimum rights to undocumented migrants. The resulting landscape of wide differences between countries on the right to access health services, cutting across different welfare and migration models, allows no sweeping generalisations.The book also gives an overview of service providers to irregular migrants, both public and private non-profit sectors. Noteworthy is the prominent role of NGOs, some of them working with a large proportion of volunteers.In the third section of the book we offer insight into some examples of good practice, covering public institutions, private non-profit organisations and surgeries of GPs and NGOs in different EU Member States. The important distinctions between parallel and complementary approaches between them are documented, with implications for the target groups.To complement the picture, we give voice to irregular migrants. Living and working conditions in the informal sector and their migration history have a big impact on their health status. Mental health and the sexual and reproductive health problems of women stand out as major problems. This is a burning issue in countries which grant less than minimum rights of access to health services. Reference is also made to the impact of restrictive health access policies on the health of children born into this irregular migrant situation. The interviews identify not only the challenges to the lives of irregular migrants, but also to their survival strategies and the important role of their migrant communities in providing support.In summing up, the book offers some recommendations which might improve the access of irregular migrants to health services, the most important ones being to raise awareness of the plight of irregular migrants not only amongst the general public and politicians, but also in the communities of the source countries. The second recommendation refers to. [end of excerpt]mehr

Autor

GUDRUN BIFFLl (editor/author) studied Economics in Vienna, Great Britain and Australia, and holds a PhD from the University of Newcastle upon Tyne. After becoming Associate Professor at the University of Economics and Business Administration in Vienna in 1993, she changed to the Danube University Krems as Head of Department for Migration and Globalisation in 2007. She has researched and published widely on migration, the labour market, education and welfare state development. The Danube University was the lead partner of the Nowhereland project.FRIEDRICH ALTENBURG (editor/author) holds master degrees in History and Communication Sciences from the University of Salzburg. After 19 years in international cooperation, dealing with emergency relief as well as with the link of migration and development, he joined the Department for Migration and Globalisation at the Danube University Krems in 2011. CARIN BJÖRNGREN-CUADRA (author) holds a PhD and is Associate Professor at the Faculty of Health and Society, Malmö University, Sweden. Her research interests are issues emerging in the intersection between health, welfare and topics understood as related to migration, ethnic and cultural diversity. One major concern is what societal change towards diversity and plurality means to public health and public health work from an ethnicity and gender perspective, with a special focus placed on welfare institutions' responses to these changes. Carin Björngren Cuadra was a member of the Nowhereland project team.