Abstract
Finding formal and stable employment in the local economy is a crucial step in the integration of refugees. In highly regulated high-income countries, multiple actors are involved in managing refugee employment and offer support to overcome its various barriers. Our research breaks new ground by focusing on the dynamics between these actors. We conducted 80 interviews with refugees, employers, governments, employer associations, refugee support organizations, and public employment services in three Western European countries. We conceive of the field as a refugee employment ecosystem in which complementarity is the key mechanism that aligns the various actors’ activities to achieve the goal of refugee employment. Complementarity means that actors not only fulfill their different roles but also step in, fill gaps, and add to others’ activities. Three microfoundations undergird this complementarity: individuals’ motives, respon-siveness, and perseverance. By showing how refugee employment ecosystems are inhab-ited and sustained by individuals whose activities go beyond their assigned actor roles, we contribute to theory development in research on refugee employment and help to humanize theorizing about ecosystems at large. We also offer practical guidance on how to increase the resilience of refugee employment ecosystems.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 339-362 |
| Number of pages | 24 |
| Journal | Academy of Management Discoveries |
| Volume | 9 |
| Issue number | 3 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Sept 2023 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:by a grant from the Science and Research Unit of the Federal State of Styria (Austria). Correspondence concerning this article should be direct to Lena Knappert ([email protected]).
Funding Information:
We would like to thank Safaa Alfaouri, Anas Al’Hashmi, Michael Fasching, Elena Ressi, Veerle Ross, Angela Sedlmaier, and Silvana Weiss for their fieldwork support, partly funded
Publisher Copyright:
© Academy of Management. All rights reserved.
Funding
by a grant from the Science and Research Unit of the Federal State of Styria (Austria). Correspondence concerning this article should be direct to Lena Knappert ([email protected]). We would like to thank Safaa Alfaouri, Anas Al’Hashmi, Michael Fasching, Elena Ressi, Veerle Ross, Angela Sedlmaier, and Silvana Weiss for their fieldwork support, partly funded
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