Access to Labor Market and Integration of Moroccan Women in Andalusia: The Two Sides of the Coin
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Labor Insertion and Varibales of Analysis: Youth, Gender, and Ethnicity
1.2. Moroccan Women in Andalusia: Their Inclusion in the Labor Market
1.3. Labor Market and Integration Process: Bidirectional Analysis
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Employment Situation of the Women Interviewed and Difficulties Identified
3.1.1. Irregular Administrative Situation: Labor Exploitation and Abuse
“In the greenhouse there is work. There is always work. All people can work. If you have paper or not, if you speak or not, if you have language or not… You work. If they see how you work, you have no problem finding work in the greenhouses”.(E_18)
3.1.2. Job Insecurity and Difficulties in Accessing Qualified Jobs
“I remember, for example, the first year when I was with the family, look it was a loving family […] But then, every time I picked up the mop or did some cleaning… I cried and cried, and came to cry, and come to cry and come to cry because I said, my mother, so many years of studies were for nothing. What am I doing?”.
3.1.3. Difficulties in Reconciling Professional and Personal Life
“Sometimes I’ve been called for a job, I’ve had to turn it down because of scheduling problems. The schedule is very bad, I can not work on holidays or weekends or boarding nights… I cannot with the children”.(E_15)
“When they call me to work at night, 2 h or 3, I always accept, but I always tell them that my daughters come with me. I ask them if I can take my daughters who are small, and I can’t leave them alone”.
3.1.4. Cultural and Religious Barriers
“As a waitress I can not because I wear a veil and that is expensive to the public, I can not […] Without studies, I believe that the only places where I can work is in the fields, cleaning, as a caregiver… very, very basic and normal jobs”.(E_04)
“If you wear a handkerchief and you start with the barrier that working in front of the public you have it very sucky. That is why I have always discarded jobs in the Mercadona, in other entities facing the public, I practically discard it because I have seen how my profile is discarded.”
“I don’t wear a headscarf, but women who wear them can only work in some jobs that are not in front of the client, because here is not a Muslim country, it is not normal for women to wear the headscarf. So, as these clashes of different cultures, of different religions, form barriers to the social integration and also the labor integration of these women, yes.”
3.2. Benefits of the Workplace to Promote Integration
3.2.1. Reason for Migration and Regularization of Women and Their Families
3.2.2. Support and Socialization Network
“I didn’t like this (referring to the life and situation I had in Spain), and I wanted to go back to Morocco. And, in the end, I met my husband in the company and stayed for him […]. I felt very supported by him”.(E_01)
3.2.3. Promote Training and Knowledge of the Language
“you have to know the language because it helps you a lot and when they come without knowing how to speak Spanish, that’s the end. And I think that the language does a lot because it helps you integrate, it helps you look for work, it helps you understand what until you reach your destination”.(E_06)
“Because of my origin, at first. Of course, because they do not talk to you at first, they just see your name. When they talk to you and see and hear that you speak Spanish perfectly, then they are back down. And the perspective is beginning to change little by little…”.(E_07)
3.2.4. Learning and Personal Growth
“I want to thank the company, the owner who brought me […] And thank you to the company that has brought me to the moment I am in today… And in life, he taught me many things.”
“For me, working is everything. First, for me it is health, it is being able to go out, it is being outside, because being at home makes you sick. Second, you meet people, you have friends, acquaintances, and it is also good. Third, you earn money, realize yourself, and then help your mother and family. That’s why it’s very important.”
4. Discussion and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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E | Time in Spain | Education Level | Work in Spain | Type(s) of Work(s) Performed | Type of Contract | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Before | Now | |||||
01 | 24 years | Up to 2nd/3rd grade | Yes | No | Field | Continuous |
02 | 4 years | One year of school | Yes | Yes | Field | Temporary |
03 | 8 years | Up to 3rd grade | Yes | Yes | Field | Temporary |
04 | 5 years | Studying 2nd year of Bachelor | Yes | Yes | Caregiver/Cook/Restaurant | Temporary |
05 | 16 years | Academic | Yes | Yes | Commercial/Intercultural mediator and team coordinator | Continuous |
06 | 30 years | Academic (did not finish) | Yes | No | Cleaner/Public Relations/Waitress/Arabic classes in associations | Temporary |
07 | 20 years | Bachelor | Yes | Yes | Caregiver/Telemarketer/Monitor | Continued |
08 | 16 years | Job training | Yes | Yes | Teaching language/Assistant (Geriatrics)/Founder and President of the association | Continued |
09 | 1 year | Without education | Yes | Yes | Cleaning/Waitress | Temporary |
10 | 1 year | Bachelor. Currently high school (Spain) | No | No | - | - |
11 | 18 years | High school | Yes | No | Field/Caregiver | Temporary |
12 | 4 years | High school | Yes | Yes | Field | Temporary |
13 | 2 years | School (several years) | Yes | No | Field | Temporary |
14 | 17 years | School | Yes | No | Field/Warehouses | Temporary |
15 | 6 years | Academic | Yes | No | Restaurant/Caregiver | Temporary |
16 | 4 years | 5th grade | Yes | Yes | Dishwasher/cook | Continued |
17 | 5 years | Academic | Yes | No | Dishwasher/Waitress/Cook/Warehouses | Temporary |
18 | 8 years | Bachelor | Yes | Yes | Caregiver/Sweeper (town hall)/Camareara/Cleaner | Temporary |
19 | 20 years | Up to 3rd high school | Yes | No | Warehouses/Greenhouses | Temporary |
20 | 5 years | Several years at school | Yes | Yes | Dishwasher/Camareera/Caregiver | Temporary |
21 | 17 years | Academic | Yes | Yes | Caregiver/Hospitality | Continued |
22 | 1 year | Without education | Yes | No | Restaurant/Caregiver | Temporary |
23 | 1 year | Without education | Yes (Ceuta) | No | Cleaning/Caregiver | Temporary |
24 | 3 years | Without education | Yes | No | Strawberry Picking | Temporary |
25 | 7 years | Academic | Yes | Yes | Kitchen DJ/Interpreter in a foundation | Temporary |
26 | 3 years | 6th grade | Yes | Yes | Field | Temporary |
27 | 3 years | 6th grade | Yes | No | Field | Temporary |
28 | 5 years | School | Yes | Yes | Field | Temporary |
29 | 3 years | Without education | Yes | Yes | Field/Hospitality | Temporary |
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Ortega-de-Mora, F.; Terrón-Caro, T. Access to Labor Market and Integration of Moroccan Women in Andalusia: The Two Sides of the Coin. Soc. Sci. 2023, 12, 534. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12100534
Ortega-de-Mora F, Terrón-Caro T. Access to Labor Market and Integration of Moroccan Women in Andalusia: The Two Sides of the Coin. Social Sciences. 2023; 12(10):534. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12100534
Chicago/Turabian StyleOrtega-de-Mora, Fabiola, and Teresa Terrón-Caro. 2023. "Access to Labor Market and Integration of Moroccan Women in Andalusia: The Two Sides of the Coin" Social Sciences 12, no. 10: 534. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12100534
APA StyleOrtega-de-Mora, F., & Terrón-Caro, T. (2023). Access to Labor Market and Integration of Moroccan Women in Andalusia: The Two Sides of the Coin. Social Sciences, 12(10), 534. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12100534