Migrant Organizations and Social Protection in Germany: The Functions of MOs for Their Target Groups’ Social Protection Practices
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Migrant Organizations and Their Functions
3. Migrant Organizations and the Welfare State
4. Research Design
5. The Functions of Migrant Organizations within the German Welfare Architecture
5.1. Homemaking Function: Providing Guidance and Orientation in an Unfamiliar Environment
These are my friends. We are a big community, but at Lomingo e.V., we are like a big family. No matter what religion, what nationality, what skin color we have. We are always friendly, we are always together as friends, like a big family. Yes.(Hamid, age 19, from Afghanistan)
And if you take this aspect into account, then it’s not just getting together and drinking coffee and feeling comfortable, but the women then experience/are here in a protected space and framework and that’s very important to create trust and to address things that they’ve basically been dragging around with them all week.(Together e.V.)
Migrant organizations, they are more like the whole environment, the trappings, taking care that the flat is properly arranged, that they, I don’t know, get to know, you know, how does the tram work? How does this work here, I don’t know, public life?(Employment agency representative)
Coming back to the networking aspect, mentioned earlier. They don’t have to be, let’s say, top jobs. It’s just about, mainly, let’s say, regarding the people who came here in the past years, their degrees are sometimes not recognized. That’s why they have to work in the low-wage sector. Then they are happy to get anything, basically. And so they ask: Does someone know of someone somewhere, where I can work? Because, it’s like this: Most of them, they want to do something, too. They want to work, too. They don’t want to sit at home. And then, I would say, good advice is taken well. And in this way, one or the other also found a job.(Alexian, age 29, born in Germany)
5.2. Service Function: Migrant Organizations as Providers of Protective Resources
There was this dementia course and a nursing course. And I sent my children there, and they received consultation. And my daughter has been in the nursing business ever since. At the age of 20, right? She started the apprenticeship. She was in 11th grade when she first did an internship. She worked with the elderly, and she liked it. So she started the apprenticeship. Like her friend, the same thing. She also came here. I never thought she would like this kind of job. She is very, like, fancy pants, you know? She never changed her siblings’ diapers, never did anything like that. But she did this job. When she told me about that, I fell off the chair. Seriously. Because it’s not like her. But she did it.(Linh, age 53, from Vietnam)
I have to admit quite honestly, in the depth of how we understand welfare, I mean, according to my observation, all six associations in NRW. The Jewish community was included as the smallest. Have we, i.e., at least so far in depth, not encountered an MSO that really offers its own services, such as senior services, daycare centers or even structural consultations? Of course, in the case of the ‚Paritätische‘, they are made up of many small associations and also of MSOs.(Welfare association Y)
I think it’s difficult to make an ideological decision or a top-down decision. Instead, you have to look at what the need is and who can best meet that need. And if it is a migrant organization, then it should, in my opinion, be awarded the contract. But if it’s a migrant organization that is exclusively concerned with the needs of Sardinian women although the need is actually there for all women, then I don’t think it should get it.(Welfare association X)
5.3. Hinging Function: How Migrant Organizations Ease Access to Welfare
I asked the Jobcenter if they can help me with an apprenticeship. And she said, no, unfortunately we can’t. You have to find something on your own and then we can see what we can do. […] And when I say I would like to do an apprenticeship, they say that I have to find a job, go and work. But when you ask for their support, they say no.(Samia, age 36, from Morocco)
That is, so this is such a part, which I would and could take over voluntarily with my association. Yes, the caregiver has somehow put everything in order, as far as debts are concerned, then also applied for care, first of all a health insurance. So, the lady had apparently not been covered by a health insurance in Germany for more than ten years, so also got sick status again and then applied for care and now also nursing service is there twice a day. This is all such a part of the caregiver and I am now really only culturally native language support there, but I mediate of course between nursing service and this lady, between caregiver and this lady and so in this form.(Representative from Enjo-Suru e.V.)
One is the representative of the Youth Welfare Office in the family, but one also plays the role of the family’s advocate before the Youth Welfare Office. [...] So you have such a (hinge function?) and that is not always easy to manage that both sides, both the family that you care for, as well as the youth welfare office, which somehow writes help plans, plans and now sets educational goals, is satisfied, yes. And if other players then come on board.(Representative from Ameren e.V.)
So if some customer doesn’t get what he wants, then he runs to a migrant organization and they get in touch and say, yes, we have this and this case, is there a possibility? That was in the time when—yes, so 2015, 2016 it was very bad, because, there were actually a great many who wanted to help and wanted to help without any legal basis and were of the opinion that they were the ones who ate the knowledge with big spoons. And then there were some problems.(Employment agency representative)
5.4. Function of Advocacy and (Political) Representation: How Migrant Organizations Advocate for the Specific Needs of People with Migration Biographies in Managing Social Risks
But what I want to say is not only that they [MOs] are recipients of funding, but these are really organizations that develop urban society by also advancing migrant organizations, especially [MO X]. And in this respect, I think as a city employee you also have to humbly stand in front of this achievement and say, okay, this is not a hierarchical thing, but these are people who are really trying to develop [city Z] just like you, like me, to bring [city Z] forward in the field of integration.(Employee of the city administration)
Yes, first of all, of course, we also try to make people aware of these problems. Even if it’s not on a regular basis, we publish a newspaper every two or three months. That’s where we address these problems, right? And of course we try to get people to organize themselves, to put more pressure on politicians, so that these problems also get attention.(Representative from Ortak e.V.)
It’s not about party politics, it’s about how can I improve people’s lives on a small scale locally, how can we make life better locally in [three cities in North Rhine–Westphalia], wherever, very practically, no, with an advisory service, with a great event, with a meeting place, with whatever. And how can we improve life, the diverse, pluralistic, democratic coexistence, by improving the decisions, by influencing them. So that we plow that at all levels. And in this respect, of course, we do it at the municipal level, at the state level, at the federal level. If someone asks us, we’ll also do it at the EU level, my God. (laughs) Right? So now that’s a resource question, what you can do and create. But, exactly. Wherever we can get involved, we try to get involved.(Representative from Dorado International e.V.)
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The six major welfare associations in Germany include the AWO (Workers’ Welfare), Diakonie (a Protestant association), Caritas (a Catholic welfare association), Paritätischer, DRK (the German Red Cross) and ZWST (a Jewish welfare association). |
2 | The political concept of ‘integration’ is highly contested and far from straightforward. Since it often serves as a point of departure for describing the roles assigned to migrant organizations in the literature and in public and political discourse, we use the term here in quotation marks to indicate a political concept targeted toward incorporating people with migration biographies within their destination context. |
3 | Migrant organizations (MOs) are also frequently referred to as migrant self-organizations (MSOs). In this article, we use the term “MO” unless the research participants we cite used “MSO” in their interviews. |
4 | Essentially based on the characteristic of “migrantness”, this definition is highly controversial and all but straightforward. In our search for a common ground for this study, however, we use the term “migrant organization” also based on the self-representation of organizations that took part in this study as organizations from and for people with migration biographies. |
5 | In Germany, most of the secular and religious MOs are legally organized as registered associations (eingetragene Vereine [e.V.]). |
6 | The term “membership” does not refer to any official status but is here used in place of “client”, since we found that MOs perceive and refer to the people they work with as “members”. |
7 | While the network maps contributed important insights on the role of MOs for social protection discussed in this article, their visualizations are not part of this discussion and therefore not presented here. |
8 | To protect their identities, the names of all interviewees referred to hereinafter were changed to pseudonyms. |
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Bonfert, L.; Günzel, E.; Kellmer, A. Migrant Organizations and Social Protection in Germany: The Functions of MOs for Their Target Groups’ Social Protection Practices. Soc. Sci. 2022, 11, 576. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11120576
Bonfert L, Günzel E, Kellmer A. Migrant Organizations and Social Protection in Germany: The Functions of MOs for Their Target Groups’ Social Protection Practices. Social Sciences. 2022; 11(12):576. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11120576
Chicago/Turabian StyleBonfert, Lisa, Eva Günzel, and Ariana Kellmer. 2022. "Migrant Organizations and Social Protection in Germany: The Functions of MOs for Their Target Groups’ Social Protection Practices" Social Sciences 11, no. 12: 576. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11120576
APA StyleBonfert, L., Günzel, E., & Kellmer, A. (2022). Migrant Organizations and Social Protection in Germany: The Functions of MOs for Their Target Groups’ Social Protection Practices. Social Sciences, 11(12), 576. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11120576