The study compares the social mobility and status attainment of first- and second-generation Turks in nine Western European countries with those of Western European natives and with those of Turks in Turkey. It shows that the children of low-class migrants are more likely to acquire a higher education than their counterparts in Turkey, making them more educationally mobile. Moreover, they successfully convert this education in the Western European labor market, and are upwardly mobile relative to the first generation. When comparing labor market outcomes of second generations relative to Turks in Turkey, however, the results show that the same level of education leads to a higher occupation in Turkey. The implications of these findings are ...
"Veranderte Lebensstile - Veranderte Kompetenzen: Turkische Migrationsjugendliche in Europa". This p...
Contains fulltext : 150757.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)This study in...
As the recent OECD PISA studies have shown, social background plays a greater role for achieving a s...
Available online: October 2015The study compares the social mobility and status attainment of first-...
The study compares the social mobility and status attainment of first and second-generation Turks in...
The study compares the social mobility and status attainment of first-and second-generation Turks in...
Research on educational and occupational achievement of immigrants in Europe has mainly followed an ...
Research commonly compares the educational outcomes of migrants and the second generation to their n...
This volume investigates educational inequalities among children of Turkish immigrants in Austria, F...
When compared with native-born women, migrant women have lower employment likelihoods. However, to r...
Migrants into European countries are often less educated than European natives. We analyse whether m...
This definitive study investigates the variations in educational mobility of Turkish second-generati...
Individuals with an origin from Turkey are one of the largest ethnic minority groups in the EU. Agai...
Migrants into European countries are often less educated than European natives. We investigate wheth...
Research on the second generation of postwar immigrants is a relatively new phenomenon. Only in the ...
"Veranderte Lebensstile - Veranderte Kompetenzen: Turkische Migrationsjugendliche in Europa". This p...
Contains fulltext : 150757.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)This study in...
As the recent OECD PISA studies have shown, social background plays a greater role for achieving a s...
Available online: October 2015The study compares the social mobility and status attainment of first-...
The study compares the social mobility and status attainment of first and second-generation Turks in...
The study compares the social mobility and status attainment of first-and second-generation Turks in...
Research on educational and occupational achievement of immigrants in Europe has mainly followed an ...
Research commonly compares the educational outcomes of migrants and the second generation to their n...
This volume investigates educational inequalities among children of Turkish immigrants in Austria, F...
When compared with native-born women, migrant women have lower employment likelihoods. However, to r...
Migrants into European countries are often less educated than European natives. We analyse whether m...
This definitive study investigates the variations in educational mobility of Turkish second-generati...
Individuals with an origin from Turkey are one of the largest ethnic minority groups in the EU. Agai...
Migrants into European countries are often less educated than European natives. We investigate wheth...
Research on the second generation of postwar immigrants is a relatively new phenomenon. Only in the ...
"Veranderte Lebensstile - Veranderte Kompetenzen: Turkische Migrationsjugendliche in Europa". This p...
Contains fulltext : 150757.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)This study in...
As the recent OECD PISA studies have shown, social background plays a greater role for achieving a s...