Refugee, AsylumProfessional integration of Ukrainian women refugees is progressing slowly
SDA
20.3.2025 - 12:33
The professional integration of Ukrainian women refugees is progressing more slowly than expected. (Archive image)
Keystone
The integration of female Ukrainian refugees with protection status S into the workforce is progressing more slowly than expected. This was the conclusion of a federal government study in which experts and refugee women were interviewed.
Keystone-SDA
20.03.2025, 12:33
20.03.2025, 12:34
SDA
Many Ukrainian women with tertiary education have training or work experience in professions that are partially regulated or structured differently in Switzerland. The State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO) announced on Thursday that this applies above all to the education, social and healthcare sectors.
In many cases, Ukrainian women have unfamiliar career paths, for example if their professional experience does not correspond to their field of study. It is difficult for them to find suitable entry-level jobs in related professions, it added. Furthermore, prior knowledge of the national languages is rather low.
The study shows that the motivation to work is high among refugees from Ukraine, but is dampened by the return orientation of Status S. The great uncertainty about the future makes it difficult for many to set a professional course, Seco wrote. Women also feel burdened by the social responsibility for their children.
In practice, access to and funding for support services is also proving difficult. Here, the experts surveyed in the study see great potential for improvements in information and coordination.
According to Seco, there are currently around 67,000 Ukrainians with S protection status living in Switzerland. It is estimated that 65 to 70 percent have a tertiary degree, of which around two thirds are women, often with school-age children. As of mid-February, the employment rate of Ukrainian refugees was 30 percent, as the State Secretariat for Migration told the Keystone-SDA news agency.
As part of the study, the experiences of 33 professionals and 34 refugees from the cantons of Aargau, Basel-Stadt, St. Gallen and Vaud were analyzed.