4.3 Article

The second generation in Germany: Between school and labor market

Journal

INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION REVIEW
Volume 37, Issue 4, Pages 1011-1038

Publisher

CENTER MIGRATION STUDIES
DOI: 10.1111/j.1747-7379.2003.tb00168.x

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The German mode of integration after World War II has been to include migrants and their offspring into general societal institutions. This can be stated despite differences between federal states in some aspects of migrant integration (e.g., the educational sector). Migrant children normally attend the same schools and classes as their German age peers, they participate in the dual system of vocational training, and there are only a few limitations in labor market access. The second generation in Germany consists mainly of children of the guestworkers recruited in southern and southeastern European countries from the 1950s onwards. It is not easy to obtain information about their numbers and their socioeconomic position, as most statistical data distinguish only between foreigners and Germans. The achieved integration status of the second generation varies between areas: obvious problems in the educational system go along with considerable progress in the vocational training system and in the labor market. Children of Turkish migrants are the most disadvantaged group among the second generation.

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