Children in immigrant families in Switzerland: on a path between discrimination and integration FIBBI, Rosita, WANNER, Philippe There were 1.5 million documented foreigners living in Switzerland in 2000. This represented 20 per cent of the resident population, which is one of the highest shares of foreign residents within any country in Europe. Switzerland may be described as a country of immigrants because of significant inflows: of the resident population aged 15 and above, 23 per cent are foreign born. At the 2000 census, of the 1,442,000 children 0 to 17 years of age living in families in Switzerland, approximately 39 per cent (559,000) were members of families of foreign origin with at least one foreign-born parent. The countries of or...
Children of immigrants are becoming an important share in Europe’s population. Although most of them...
The extent to which discrimination in employment disadvantages children of immigrants is a major que...
Refugees have sought asylum all over the world for many years. Because globalisation is inevitable, ...
There were 1.5 million documented foreigners living in Switzerland in 2000. This represented 20 per ...
Switzerland is recognised as an immigration country. As in other European countries, awareness of th...
International audienceSince the mid - 1970s, immigration for family reunification has been more impo...
Switzerland is one of the countries with the highest proportion of international migrants and non-ci...
The children of seasonal workers: clandestine children After the Second World War Switzerland became...
International audienceSince the mid - 1970s, immigration for family reunification has been more impo...
Wanner P., Piguet É. The Practice of Naturalization in Switzerland: A Statistical Overview. In: Popu...
This study compares the intergenerational transmission of educational attainment across immigrant gr...
Switzerland has developed an official policy of integration with a priority accorded to new immigran...
In 2000, 20 per cent of the Swiss resident population was constituted by foreigners (Fibbi and Wanne...
The proportion of people with an immigrant background is high in Switzerland (35%, 23% of foreign na...
We study discrimination against immigrants using microlevel data from Switzerland, where, until rece...
Children of immigrants are becoming an important share in Europe’s population. Although most of them...
The extent to which discrimination in employment disadvantages children of immigrants is a major que...
Refugees have sought asylum all over the world for many years. Because globalisation is inevitable, ...
There were 1.5 million documented foreigners living in Switzerland in 2000. This represented 20 per ...
Switzerland is recognised as an immigration country. As in other European countries, awareness of th...
International audienceSince the mid - 1970s, immigration for family reunification has been more impo...
Switzerland is one of the countries with the highest proportion of international migrants and non-ci...
The children of seasonal workers: clandestine children After the Second World War Switzerland became...
International audienceSince the mid - 1970s, immigration for family reunification has been more impo...
Wanner P., Piguet É. The Practice of Naturalization in Switzerland: A Statistical Overview. In: Popu...
This study compares the intergenerational transmission of educational attainment across immigrant gr...
Switzerland has developed an official policy of integration with a priority accorded to new immigran...
In 2000, 20 per cent of the Swiss resident population was constituted by foreigners (Fibbi and Wanne...
The proportion of people with an immigrant background is high in Switzerland (35%, 23% of foreign na...
We study discrimination against immigrants using microlevel data from Switzerland, where, until rece...
Children of immigrants are becoming an important share in Europe’s population. Although most of them...
The extent to which discrimination in employment disadvantages children of immigrants is a major que...
Refugees have sought asylum all over the world for many years. Because globalisation is inevitable, ...