Un terrain marchand à l'épreuve de la diversité culturelle
In: Hommes & migrations: première revue française des questions d'immigration, Heft 1280, S. 106-117
ISSN: 2262-3353
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In: Hommes & migrations: première revue française des questions d'immigration, Heft 1280, S. 106-117
ISSN: 2262-3353
In: Hommes & migrations: première revue française des questions d'immigration, Band 1264, Heft 1, S. 114-128
ISSN: 2262-3353
Depuis le milieu des années quatre-vingt, les sciences sociales se sont penchées sur les activités indépendantes exercées par les migrants et ont mis en évidence une série de facteurs explicatifs.
Si les interdictions statutaires ont été maintenues après la Libération, limitant la présence des étrangers sur le marché du travail, force est de constater qu'une classe d'entrepreneurs d'origine étrangère (artisans, commerçants ou chef d'entreprise) s'est affirmée depuis plus de deux décennies. Leur nombre a considérablement augmenté, compensant en partie la baisse importante et constante des entrepreneurs français.
The objective of this paper is to focus on the inequalities facing immigrants in access to the labour market and the impact of these on immigrant entrepreneurship. Unlike in other areas of legislation regarding foreigners, there has been a tendency to increase legal discrimination for over a century. Whereas European states have become the destination countries of immigrants mainly since 1945, France has been a receiving country for much longer. It was a destination for neighbouring Europeans as well as for people from other continents for a long time, with systematic evidence since the second half of the nineteenth century (381,000 resident foreigners in 1851, one million in 1881). Most of the discriminatory measures of the 1930s are still in force today. However, a class of small entrepreneurs of foreign origin has asserted itself in the receiving society during the past three decades, partly compensating for the continuous decrease in the number of French native entrepreneurs.
BASE
The objective of this paper is to focus on the inequalities facing immigrants in access to the labour market and the impact of these on immigrant entrepreneurship. Unlike in other areas of legislation regarding foreigners, there has been a tendency to increase legal discrimination for over a century. Whereas European states have become the destination countries of immigrants mainly since 1945, France has been a receiving country for much longer. It was a destination for neighbouring Europeans as well as for people from other continents for a long time, with systematic evidence since the second half of the nineteenth century (381,000 resident foreigners in 1851, one million in 1881). Most of the discriminatory measures of the 1930s are still in force today. However, a class of small entrepreneurs of foreign origin has asserted itself in the receiving society during the past three decades, partly compensating for the continuous decrease in the number of French native entrepreneurs.
BASE
The objective of this paper is to focus on the inequalities facing immigrants in access to the labour market and the impact of these on immigrant entrepreneurship. Unlike in other areas of legislation regarding foreigners, there has been a tendency to increase legal discrimination for over a century. Whereas European states have become the destination countries of immigrants mainly since 1945, France has been a receiving country for much longer. It was a destination for neighbouring Europeans as well as for people from other continents for a long time, with systematic evidence since the second half of the nineteenth century (381,000 resident foreigners in 1851, one million in 1881). Most of the discriminatory measures of the 1930s are still in force today. However, a class of small entrepreneurs of foreign origin has asserted itself in the receiving society during the past three decades, partly compensating for the continuous decrease in the number of French native entrepreneurs.
BASE