Working Paper

Does Granting Refugee Status to Family-Reunified Women Improve Their Integration?

Linea Hasager
CESifo, Munich, 2023

CESifo Working Paper No. 10866

In most countries, men are the principal asylum applicants, while women are admitted through family-reunification procedures. Family reunification implies that women’s residence permits are contingent on remaining married to their husbands. Using a staggered Difference-in-Differences (DID) Design, I document that granting asylum to family-reunified women improves their economic integration, increases the probability of divorce and decreases their risk of being victims of violence. I find significant impacts on victimization and economic integration regardless of whether the woman remains married or not. I propose that the results can be explained by a reduction in uncertainty about residency and an increase in female bargaining power when the women are granted an autonomous asylum status.

CESifo Category
Labour Markets
Keywords: refugees, asylum recognition, family reunification, female integration, violence against women, staggered difference-in-differences design
JEL Classification: J120, J150, J610, K370