The meaning of work among immigrants living in poverty in Israel: Replanting roots of belonging
By: Sigad L.I., Eisikovits Z., Strier R., Buchbinder E.
Published in: International Journal of Social Welfare
SDGs : SDG 10 | Units: Social Welfare & Health Sciences | Time: 2018 | Link
Description: The global financial crisis has increased the number of working immigrants living in poverty around the world. This arti cle presents and analyses the interaction of work, immigration and poverty among working immigrants in Israel. Methodologically, this study has combined hermeneutic phenomenological and social constructivist approaches and in so doing has aimed to describe the realities of immigrants living and working in poverty. Presenting both men’s and women’s perspectives, we found that immigrants who work and live in poverty attribute crucial significance to work, which serves as a primary route of integration into the new culture as well as a means of coping with both the uprootedness caused by immigration and the difficulties of living in poverty. However, immigrants’ construction of work as the sole conduit for integration leaves them particularly vulnerable to discriminatory workplace practices. © 2017 The Author(s). International Journal of Social Welfare © 2017 International Journal of Social Welfare and John Wiley & Sons Ltd