Description du projet
Comment la citoyenneté façonne l’intégration des migrants
Quand la citoyenneté favorise-t-elle l’intégration des migrants? Les parcours rapides peuvent maximiser la réussite de l’établissement, mais les parcours courts peuvent décourager l’intégration. Il existe peu de connaissances concernant le pourquoi, le comment et le «pour qui» de la transition du statut juridique, et sur la manière dont les variations politiques affectent cette relation. Quels migrants sont découragés par des conditions de naturalisation plus strictes? Qui bénéficie le plus de l’acquisition de la citoyenneté? Cela a-t-il encore de l’importance après une longue période d’attente? Financé par le Conseil européen de la recherche, le projet MiLifeStatus examinera les motivations des migrants, les contextes institutionnels et les avantages de l’intégration découlant de la naturalisation. À l’aide de données transversales et longitudinales provenant d’Europe, le projet vise à informer les politiques de citoyenneté ciblées afin de maximiser la réussite de l’établissement des immigrants et de leurs descendants. Il est essentiel de comprendre cette relation complexe pour favoriser l’intégration et la cohésion sociale.
Objectif
When does citizenship provide a boost to migrant integration? A fast-track to citizenship can maximise the potential for settlement success, though too short a pathway can disincentivise integration. Not all migrants have an equal interest in naturalising and some are discouraged by restrictive policies. Yet little is known about why, how and for whom legal status transition matters and, especially, how policy variation impacts on this relation. Which migrants are most discouraged by stricter requirements for naturalisation? For whom carries citizenship the largest pay-off? Does it still matter if a migrant acquires citizenship after a long waiting period? This project combines for the first time the ideas that a) migrants have different motivations to naturalise; b) legal status transitions are conditioned by the institutional and socioeconomic contexts in origin and destination countries and c) the potential ‘integration premium’ associated with naturalisation is conditioned by the trajectory into citizenship.
The innovative project contributions are:
1. modelling migrants’ legal status transitions as life course events, which are shaped by migrants’ origin, their family context and societal structures and institutions;
2. analysing the relevance of citizenship for work and income, living conditions, health status and out-migration among immigrants and for educational attainment among their descendants;
3. developing novel methodologies to analyse step-to-citizenship trajectories and the impact of policy changes on status transitions and related outcomes among migrant groups and cohorts;
4. testing models on the basis of a unique combination of longitudinal register-based and survey-based micro-data in 8 European and North American countries, which provide the comparative context to analyse the impact of institutional variation;
5. yielding information for targeted citizenship policies to maximise settlement success for immigrants and their children.
Champ scientifique
Programme(s)
Régime de financement
ERC-COG - Consolidator GrantInstitution d’accueil
50014 Fiesole
Italie