Working Hard and Pushing Through: A Thematic Analysis of Humanitarian Migrants’ Experiences in the Australian Workforce
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Recruitment
2.2. Interviews
3. Approach to Analysis
4. Analysis and Discussion
5. Uncertainty and Insecurity
5.1. Language Barriers
“I haven’t finished my hours yet. I did maybe 200 h and then just started looking for work because at the time, it was really challenging. I feel probably now that was the wrong choice because it could have been better if I continued … because probably now I’d be in a better job”.(South Sudanese participant)
“I don’t know sometimes. Some people they feel like the way you communicate with them, especially at the beginning, they feel like maybe you’re dumb, you don’t understand, things like that. But the fact is, you come to this a new country, it’s going to be hard, you need to learn, just put yourself in my shoes, go to another country, it’s not going to be easy”.(South Sudanese participant)
“I got a high diploma for Accounting, but it was my English abilities, every time I found a letter pushing back. I went to sign up for the class. But if I just sit on the government money, I just run out of money, I can’t pay the rent … it was very hard, and I decided oh what for, I’d better look for another job, so I went to the factory”.(South Sudanese participant)
“When I came, I don’t have confidence to go and continue university. Can I do it? Oh, I don’t think so—my English is not enough, this is my thought. That’s why I say to myself, just get something like aged care”.(South Sudanese participant)
“… everything computer, so when you go to the agency yourself—he give you computer. I am 51, I don’t know much about computers. So when I go for the interview, they give you computer … but me don’t understand computer”.(South Sudanese participant)
“We are doing our medication, everything on the computer and everything live and accidently you click that thing there—like you haven’t even given it to someone—you just click wrong thing there, you get warning … and you cannot get it back because it is live, and if you go three times [three warnings] you have to be dismissed”(South Sudanese participant)
“The language sometimes problem, you can’t be involved with the people, sometimes I feel people avoid to speak a lot with me because of the language, yeah. Sometimes when they are using phrases and stuff for the work, it’s new to me. Even the customers sometimes, they are saying jokes sometimes, and it’s a bit hard for me to understand”.(Iraqi participant)
“If you don’t speak English you feel intimidated, you overthink. You want to communicate with the person, but you can’t, you know, because the English is not there. And I feel some co-workers if you don’t communicate, they think maybe—this person he’s not friendly”.(South Sudanese participant)
“At the moment, I’m happy, because the way you can reach out to people it’s easy, people will understand what you say, and you try and interact with them, everything is sweet”.(South Sudanese participant)
5.2. Job Security
“There is no security. I’ve been there for nearly one and a half years now, and I’m just casual, and the money’s very small and all that. How do you say that is a secure job?”.(South Sudanese participant)
“I don’t know if maybe in the future I have a job or not—it’s not secure. I’d like a permanent job, because that’s peace of mind”.(Afghani participant)
“There was a job—people go to work in the farm. I went here and you work whole day and you come home with maybe $40, $50 and oh my lord you tired! … all the day, you leave home at five or four and you come back home six or seven and that’s all you got in your pocket. And people have to go—even when I quit—there is still a lot of people going there”.(South Sudanese participant)
5.3. Voicing Concerns
“After I turned 18, I felt like I was still getting paid the rate I previously was, because once you turn 18 you get paid the adult wage, but I wasn’t really sure and I was confused, so I didn’t ask questions at the time because I wasn’t sure who to go to”.(South Sudanese participant)
“I couldn’t raise my voice for some reason because they can email you in three days, they say look sorry we don’t have a job for you, and it’s really hard for me, because I’m in this country, I can’t get another job”.(Afghani participant)
“I worked about 6 days and I was expecting good money, and they decided to pay $9 [per hour] instead of the $12 … wasn’t fair but at the same time you just have to keep going because it pays your bills”.(South Sudanese participant)
6. Working Hard and Pushing Through
6.1. Hard Work and Working Hard
“I work, I do anything—I do cleaning, I do kitchen hand, I do anything. I work hard in the company to survive”.(South Sudanese participant)
“you have to work very fast, there are a lot of things to do. People can’t manage—they come work for three days, four days, and they go”.(South Sudanese participant)
“I work three jobs, I clean at five o’clock in the morning, then seven I go to work in [] I finish three o’clock, I come home sleep two hours, then I go to [] for six hours. Why do I do that? To buy a house and put my kids in a good school, that’s why I do this”.(South Sudanese participant)
“When I come here, I’m a professional cook in the hotels, so when I come to Australia, they told me you need the Australian experience—whatever you work in Europe or Africa, but we need the Australian experience. So, I say alright, my English is not good, but I will start from zero, which is kitchen hand, then I can go to my courses. So that I do for myself and I try hard to do anything to be in Australian society”.(South Sudanese participant)
“and the labouring was a heavy job, you start six—go till six, then you run to the study and finish at nine. It was very hard”.(South Sudanese participant)
“It’s very hard for me, in the beginning it was very hard. I never expected to get such a job. I never expected to be a labourer, because in the past in my country I have a very good job, I was a teacher in a university, but yeah when I came here, it was very difficult for me, still I didn’t find my right position”.(Afghani participant)
“People say—Oh you’ve got a double Masters and you’re working as a security guard—and all this, and I say—at least I’m working, and if I’m working, I work properly”.(South Sudanese participant)
6.2. Working with Bullying and Discrimination
“He [a co-worker] made me cry. He was saying you are from Afghanistan, yeah there are all Taliban’s—and saying bad things about my country”.(Afghani participant)
“I work in a place where the majority of people they are from the same country, so I’m the only one there, some of them if I am rostered with them, they will alter their roster”.(South Sudanese participant)
“My first job was the tough one, the supervisor was rude, if I look at it now, I feel like I’ve been bullied, but at the time, I was afraid to talk, afraid to do something about it. The supervisor was really bad—you know what I mean”.(South Sudanese participant)
“It was really tough, it was really hard—like you feel sometimes before you go to work you are happy, but when you get there, you’re not happy at all. You’re doing it because you have that fear, if I lose this job, I’m not going to get another one. I just keep silent, whoever says, whatever—I just keep quiet”.(South Sudanese participant)
“You need to just move on with it, you can’t do much about it, because if you want to try to get into a fight with everyone at the end of the day you going to be in trouble, so it’s better just suck it in and then just let it go—you know what I mean”.(South Sudanese participant)
“I’ve got friends, one from Africa, one from India, we started together, we did the induction together, but them when they see the treatments not right, they just left. But I just kept working—but at the end they [established employees] ask me like—how come you’re still here? I just tell them—I’m here to work, I come here and do my job and that’s it”.(South Sudanese participant)
“Normally the elderly people they never come closer with the people with the darker skin like this. Once you go there to talk to her, if you go there, she will warn you from far away—don’t touch me, you so dark, you look ugly, don’t come closer”.(South Sudanese participant)
“At first, I thought it was bad, sometimes I’d go and sit and cry and cry and then, yeah you’ve got some of the colleagues, they go and talk to you nicely, and the manager will come and talk to you nicely, and give you the advice—that’s how they are—you just take it easy”.(South Sudanese participant)
“… you get very stressed sometimes, but when you come back and you go back to that person’s condition … when they tell you their story—they never have brown skin people working with them before”.(South Sudanese participant)
“Discrimination only because of the clients, but for me, I can see it’s their rights, whatever they want, it’s their choice”.(South Sudanese participant)
“Sometimes, if someone tells you something—make you angry—so you try and make it like—Ok he say that, but maybe he just like, he doesn’t understand”.(South Sudanese participant)
7. Positive Attitudes and Actions
7.1. Strong Work Ethic
“That is because when I take a job, I really work. I work properly. I’ve got certificates from getting the award for the worker of the month and all this type of stuff. Wherever I work, I will really work. I really put my time to work, I don’t play around—I really do it”.(South Sudanese participant)
“If someone waiting for you—and you have to shower them—or you have to feed them—I feel like I am doing a good job. I feel I’m important and I’m proud what I’m doing”.(South Sudanese participant)
“I feel happy supporting people with disability, and you know help their needs. I feel happy that I’m helping—not because of money—but because I have the passion to help the people”.(South Sudanese participant)
7.2. Resilience
“I don’t have to take their issue as a big deal for me—that’s why if the client say they don’t like maybe because I’m black or from Africa, for me it’s not a big deal. I’m African yeah—god create me like that—what you gonna do? There is others that can help you—I will help others too—it’s not a big deal for me”.(South Sudanese participant)
“If they send you to someone—and they are like I don’t want to see you—you black Africans … they don’t like me—it’s ok—I am here to help. They don’t like my help, let him wait for someone that he like it. But I am sure if I help him, it will be better than someone else. I know myself, I can do my job 100%”.(South Sudanese participant)
“But I came out from there—I was like ok, I like handled, I felt like once I got out from that job, and then I didn’t quit, after a while I find another job and I left, but I felt like that was the turning point for me, I felt like ok—now if I succeeded in this job—I think anywhere in Australia if I work with whoever, I can succeed, you know what I mean. I work there for three years even though it was tough and that person was really bullying—I stay there”.(South Sudanese participant)
“When your life has always been struggling you tend to—you know—take things easy. So even if there’s no money I don’t really get much like stress. ‘Cos where I come from, its challenge we don’t even have much … like here at least you can see there is something in the fridge, but sometime like back home I remember we can go even up to, let me say, two days no food”.(South Sudanese participant)
“I was born in South Sudan, I grew in Congo … I’ve seen a lot. I’ve learnt a lot also”.(South Sudanese participant)
“Before coming [to Australia] I didn’t think about a job, nothing, the bad situation was lack of security in my country—so I was thinking about my life!”.(Afghani participant)
8. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
- SSI. Where Do Australia’s Refugees Come from? Settlement Services International (SSI), 2019. Available online: https://www.ssi.org.au/faqs/refugee-faqs/140-where-do-Australia-s-refugees-come-from (accessed on 12 March 2021).
- Macaulay, L.; Deppeler, J. Perspectives on negative media representations of Sudanese and south Sudanese youths in Australia. J. Intercult. Stud. 2020, 41, 213–230. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Refugee Council of Australia. Key Facts on the Conflict in South Sudan. 2018. Available online: https://www.refugeecouncil.org.au/south-sudan/ (accessed on 24 June 2021).
- Henriques-Gomes, L. South Sudanese-Australians Report Racial Abuse Intensified after ‘African Gangs’ Claims; Guardian. 2018. Available online: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/nov/04/south-Sudanese-Australians-report-abuse-intensified-after-African-gangs-claims (accessed on 7 July 2021).
- Colic-Peisker, V.; Tilbury, F. Refugees and Employment: The Effect of Visible Difference on Discrimination; Centre for Social and Community Research, Murdoch University: Perth, Australia, 2007. [Google Scholar]
- Valtonen, K. From the margin to the mainstream: Conceptualizing refugee settlement processes. J. Refug. Stud. 2004, 17, 70–96. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Wood, N.; Charlwood, G.; Zecchin, C.; Hansen, V.; Douglas, M.; Pit, S.W. Qualitative exploration of the impact of employment and volunteering upon the health and wellbeing of African refugees settled in regional Australia: A refugee perspective. BMC Public Health 2019, 19, 1–15. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Wahrendorf, M.; Hoven, H.; Goldberg, M.; Zins, M.; Siegrist, J. Adverse employment histories and health functioning: The constances study. Int. J. Epidemiol. 2018, 48, 402–414. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Daly, A.; Carey, R.N.; Darcey, E.; Chih, H.; LaMontagne, A.D.; Milner, A.; Reid, A. Workplace psychosocial stressors experienced by migrant workers in Australia: A cross-sectional study. PLoS ONE 2018, 13, e0203998. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- Daly, A.; Carey, R.N.; Darcey, E.; Chih, H.; LaMontagne, A.D.; Milner, A.; Reid, A. Using three cross-sectional surveys to compare workplace psychosocial stressors and associated mental health status in six migrant groups working in Australia compared with Australian-born workers. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2019, 16, 735. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- Kosny, A.; Santos, I.; Reid, A. Employment in a “land of opportunity?” Immigrants’ experiences of racism and discrimination in the Australian workplace. J. Int. Migr. Integr. 2017, 18, 483–497. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cain, P.; Daly, A.; Reid, A. How refugees experience the Australian workplace: A comparative mixed methods study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 4023. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Colic-Peisker, V.; Tilbury, F. Employment niches for recent refugees: Segmented labour market in twenty-first century Australia. J. Refug. Stud. 2006, 19, 203–229. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Walther, L.; Amann, J.; Flick, U.; Ta, T.M.T.; Bajbouj, M.; Hahn, E. A qualitative study on resilience in adult refugees in Germany. BMC Public Health 2021, 21, 828. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Leach, L.; Butterworth, P.; Rodgers, B.; Strazdins, L. Deriving an evidence-based measure of job quality from the hilda survey. Aust. Soc. Policy 2010, 9, 67–86. Available online: http://search.informit.com.au.dbgw.lis.curtin.edu.au/documentSummary;dn=201009161;res=IELAPA (accessed on 7 July 2021).
- Braun, V.; Clarke, V. Using thematic analysis in psychology. Qual. Res. Psychol. 2006, 3, 77–101. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Australian Government, Australian Department of Home Affairs, Immigration and Citizenship. Australian Migrant English Program (AMEP). 2021. Available online: https://immi.homeaffairs.gov.au/settling-in-Australia/amep/about-the-program (accessed on 7 July 2021).
- Chen, C.; Smith, P.; Mustard, C. The prevalence of over-qualification and its association with health status among occupationally active new immigrants to Canada. Ethn. Health 2010, 15, 601–619. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Milner, A.; LaMontagne, A.D. Underemployment and mental health: Comparing fixed-effects and random-effects regression approaches in an Australian working population cohort. Occup. Environ. Med. 2017, 74, 344–350. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Berg, L.; Farbenblum, B. Wage Theft in Australia: Findings of the National Temporary Migrant Worker Survey; Law School, University of Sydney: Sydney, Australia, 2017; pp. 1–54. [Google Scholar]
- Australian Government. Minimum Wages; Ombudsman, F., Ed.; Fair Work Commission: Canberra, Australia, 2021. Available online: https://www.fairwork.gov.au/how-we-will-help/templates-and-guides/fact-sheets/minimum-workplace-entitlements/minimum-wages (accessed on 7 July 2021).
- Reid, A.; Lenguerrand, E.; Santos, I.; Read, U.; LaMontagne, A.D.; Fritschi, L.; Harding, S. Taking risks and survival jobs: Foreign-born workers and work-related injuries in Australia. Saf. Sci. 2014, 70, 378–386. Available online: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0925753514001611 (accessed on 7 July 2021). [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Fozdar, F.; Torezani, S. Discrimination and well-being: Perceptions of refugees in western Australia. Int. Migr. Rev. 2008, 42, 30–63. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- McIntosh, P. White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack; New York State Council of Educational Associations: New York, NY, USA, 1992; p. 246. [Google Scholar]
- Uekusa, S.; Matthewman, S. Vulnerable and resilient? Immigrants and refugees in the 2010–2011 Canterbury and Tohoku disasters. Int. J. Disaster Risk Reduct. 2017, 22, 355–361. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Colic-Peisker, V.; Tilbury, F. Integration into the Australian labour market: The experience of three “visibly different” groups of recently arrived refugees. Int. Migr. 2007, 45, 59–85. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Participant Characteristics | n (%) |
---|---|
Country of birth | |
South Sudan | 20 (67) |
Afghanistan | 8 (27) |
Iraq | 2 (6) |
Male | 19 (63) |
Female | 11 (37) |
Age range (years) | |
18–25 | 5 (17) |
26–35 | 10 (33) |
36–45 | 9 (30) |
46–55 | 6 (20) |
Duration of residence in Australia | |
0–5 years | 6 (20) |
5–10 years | 5 (17) |
10+ years | 19 (63) |
Highest educational attainment | |
High school | 5 (17) |
Certificate/diploma | 11 (37) |
Trade/apprenticeship | 1 (3) |
Bachelor’s degree or higher | 13 (43) |
Employment status | |
Casual | 9 (30) |
Part-time | 6 (20) |
Full-time | 11 (37) |
Self Employed | 4 (13) |
Industry of employer | |
Construction/Trade | 2 (6) |
Food services | 9 (30) |
Education and training | 2 (6) |
Health care and social assistance | 10 (33) |
Cleaning | 2 (6) |
Warehousing | 2 (6) |
Other | 3 (10) |
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. |
© 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Cain, P.; Reid, A. Working Hard and Pushing Through: A Thematic Analysis of Humanitarian Migrants’ Experiences in the Australian Workforce. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 11502. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111502
Cain P, Reid A. Working Hard and Pushing Through: A Thematic Analysis of Humanitarian Migrants’ Experiences in the Australian Workforce. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(21):11502. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111502
Chicago/Turabian StyleCain, Patricia, and Alison Reid. 2021. "Working Hard and Pushing Through: A Thematic Analysis of Humanitarian Migrants’ Experiences in the Australian Workforce" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 21: 11502. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111502
APA StyleCain, P., & Reid, A. (2021). Working Hard and Pushing Through: A Thematic Analysis of Humanitarian Migrants’ Experiences in the Australian Workforce. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(21), 11502. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111502