Refugees from Ukraine in Germany
Content and Objectives
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Russia's war of aggression against Ukraine has led to a continuous and rapidly increasing influx of Ukrainian refugees to Germany since the beginning of 2022. Comprehensive knowledge about the socio-demographics of refugees from Ukraine is essential in order to overcome the challenges of receiving and (temporarily) integrating the largest refugee migration to Germany in the past seventy years. Against this background, the panel survey "Refugees from Ukraine in Germany" was developed. This has created a special social science database that makes it possible, on the one hand, to provide policymakers with information about refugees from Ukraine who have fled to Germany on the basis of valid data. On the other hand, it also creates an infrastructure that enables scientifically sound research into this type of migration and integration and a comparison with other migration and integration processes. The project, which was launched in 2022 with other partners, aims to investigate the individual consequences of flight for family structures, health, well-being and the labour market situation, among other things. In particular, the needs and problems associated with refugee migration are to be mapped on the basis of high-quality data and also made analysable at the level of individual life courses. Against the background of the specific socio-demographics of Ukrainian refugees, the use of childcare and other educational programmes for children and young people also plays a special role.
The project also focuses on the refugees' intentions to stay in Germany and their return migration processes to Ukraine. This also includes the emergence of circular and transnational exchange and migration processes between Ukraine and Germany. In addition, children and young people who have fled Ukraine with their parents will be interviewed for the first time in 2024. The project is being carried out in cooperation between several research groups at the institute, creating a variety of synergy effects between the different disciplines and research groups at the BiB.
After the first waves were conducted with three co-operation partners, the third survey wave was conducted by the BiB alone. For an interim survey in 2023, a cooperation was entered into with the Paris School of Economics (PSE), the Central Institute of Mental Health (ZI) in Mannheim and the World Bank. The focus is on mental health. Corresponding data can be analysed in 2024 and presented to the specialist public.
Data and Methods
The panel study “Refugees from Ukraine in Germany” is based on a register-based random sample based on the residents' registration offices, which enables representative results on Ukrainians registered in Germany since the beginning of the war. The panel survey was established in summer 2022 in cooperation between the BiB, the Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) at the German Institute for Economic Research, the Institute for Employment Research (IAB) and the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF). Since the completion of the second survey wave in March 2023, the panel study has been continued in the long term as part of the Family Demographic Panel - as a FReDA-related study. The data set for the first and second waves was published in July 2024 and is available free of charge.
Duration
03/2022 - permanent
Team
Partners
- Prof. Dr. Yiliya Kosyakova, Research Centre of the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF-FZ), Germany
- Prof. Dr. Herbert Brücker, Institute for Employment Research (IAB) of the Federal Employment Agency (BA), Germany
- Dr. Nina Rother, Wenke Niehues, Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP), Germany
- Prof. Dr. Sabine Zinn, German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin), Germany
- Dr. Markus Grabka, German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin), Germany
- Dr. Alexander Moldavski, Zentralinstitut für Seelische Gesundheit (ZI), Mannheim, Germany
- Prof. Esther Duflo, , Paris School of Economics (PSE), France
- Prof. Luc Behaghel, Paris School of Economics (PSE), France
- PD Dr. Alexandra Avdeenko, World Bank