| Literature DB >> 35344571 |
Patrick F Kotzur1, Johannes Stricker2, Ramona Fricke3, Jonathan McPhetres1, Bertolt Meyer4.
Abstract
The successful integration of asylum seekers into the labor market is among the most pressing issues of refugee-receiving countries. We construe co-workers' willingness to collaborate with asylum seekers as a crucial factor for integration and investigate its antecedents. Linking Allport's contact theory with team diversity theories, we propose that a work team's diversity affects team members' willingness to collaborate with asylum seekers. We thus investigated the effects of different facets of objective (national, migration background, age, and gender) and perceived diversity in work teams on team members' willingness to collaborate with asylum seekers. In doing so, we also tested whether asylum seekers' status in the team hierarchy (superior vs. colleague), task interdependence, and pro-diversity team norms moderate these effects. Multi-level regression analyses based on 470 participants nested in 106 teams showed that, overall, team diversity played a small role in explaining the willingness to collaborate with asylum seekers. Age diversity was negatively associated with the willingness to collaborate with asylum seekers, especially when asylum seekers were considered to take a post as a superior rather than a colleague. In teams with high task interdependence, migration background diversity and willingness to collaborate with asylum seekers were positively associated. Pro-diversity norms did not moderate team diversity effects. Overall, our findings demonstrate that team diversity can have beneficial, harmful, and no substantial consequences for the willingness to work with asylum seekers, depending on the considered type of diversity and boundary conditions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35344571 PMCID: PMC8959154 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0266166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Means, standard deviations, and correlations between variables on the individual level.
| M | SD | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Intention to collaborate with asylum seekers as colleagues | 4.13 | 0.92 | |||||||||
| 2 | Intention to collaborate with asylum seekers as superiors | 3.68 | 1.14 | .77 | ||||||||
| 3 | Diversity beliefs | 4.17 | 0.69 | .37 | .30 | |||||||
| 4 | Task interdependence | 4.48 | 1.20 | .11 | .11 | .24 | ||||||
| 5 | Perceived diversity | 4.91 | 1.17 | -.10 | -.12 | .10 | .05 | |||||
| 6 | Migration background (1 = yes, 2 = no) | 1.83 | 0.38 | .00 | -.04 | .05 | -.06 | .04 | ||||
| 7 | Gender (1 = female, 2 = male) | 1.58 | 0.49 | .14 | .05 | .08 | .04 | .05 | .05 | |||
| 8 | Age | 34.36 | 11.92 | -.18 | -.24 | .06 | -.04 | .15 | .15 | -.02 | ||
| 9 | Team size | 10.57 | 8.49 | .15 | .19 | .14 | .12 | -.04 | -.05 | -.01 | -.23 | |
| 10 | Intergroup contact | 2.35 | 1.03 | .14 | .09 | .17 | .01 | .03 | .04 | .03 | .01 | .01 |
Note. * p < .05,
** p < .01,
*** p < .001.
Nationality is not displayed in this table because it is a multi-categorical variable, meaning that means, standard deviations, and correlations of this measure are not meaningfully interpretable on the individual level.
Parameters in the estimated models.
| Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | Model 4 | Model 5 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 95% CI |
| 95% CI |
| 95% CI |
| 95% CI |
| 95% CI | |
| Intercept | 1.96 | [0.69, 3.23] | 2.21 | [0.78, 3.65] | 2.14 | [0.71, 3.58] | 2.52 | [0.79, 4.25] | 1.50 | [-2.21, 3.61] |
|
| ||||||||||
| Team size | -0.00 | [-0.01, 0.01] | 0.00 | [-0.01, 0.02] | 0.00 | [-0.01, 0.02] | 0.00 | [-0.01, 0.02] | -0.00 | [-0.02, 0.01] |
| Team type: voluntary work | 0.29 | [-0.06, 0.63] | 0.00 | [-0.38, 0.39] | 0.00 | [-0.38, 0.39] | -0.04 | [-0.44, 0.36] | -0.01 | [-0.41, 0.38] |
| Team type: police | -2.15 | [-2.80, -1.50] | -2.24 | [-2.89, -1.59] | -2.23 | [-2.88, -1.59] | -2.26 | [-2.92, -1.61] | -2.31 | [-2.97, -1.65] |
| Team type: private sector | 0.04 | -0.26, 0.34] | -0.00 | [-0.30, 0.30] | -0.00 | [-0.30, 0.30] | -0.02 | [-0.33, 0.29] | -0.02 | [-0.33, 0.29] |
| Team type: other | 0.36 | [-0.04, 0.76] | 0.37 | [-0.02, 0.77] | 0.37 | [-0.03, 0.77] | 0.40 | [-0.01, 0.80] | 0.40 | [-0.01, 0.80] |
| Pro-diversity norms | 0.55 | [0.24, 0.86] | 0.51 | [0.18, 0.83] | 0.51 | [0.18, 0.83] | 0.50 | [0.16, 0.83] | 0.70 | [-0.28, 1.67] |
| National diversity (Blau index) | -0.16 | [-1.19, 0.87] | -0.10 | [-1.18, 0.98] | 3.00 | [-0.22, 6.21] | 7.49 | [-9.21, 24.19] | ||
| Migration background diversity (Blau index) | 0.44 | [-0.16, 1.04] | 0.41 | [-0.22, 1.03] | -1.57 | [-3.40, 0.26] | -3.31 | [-9.16, 2.45] | ||
| Age diversity (standard deviation) | -0.04 | -0.07, -0.01] | -0.03 | [-0.06, 0.00] | 0.00 | [-0.07, 0.08] | 0.04 | [-0.26, 0.34] | ||
| Gender diversity (Blau index) | 0.20 | [-0.34, 0.74] | 0.13 | [-0.44, 0.70] | -0.09 | [-1.95, 1.78] | 3.55 | [-3.09, 10.20] | ||
|
| ||||||||||
| Age | -0.01 | [-0.02, -0.01] | -0.01 | [-0.02, -0.00] | -0.01 | [-0.02, -0.00] | -0.01 | [-0.02, -0.00] | -0.01 | [-0.02, -0.00] |
| Gender | -0.04 | [-0.21, 0.14] | -0.00 | [-0.18, 0.17] | -0.00 | [-0.18, 0.18] | -0.05 | [-0.22, 0.13] | -0.02 | [-0.20, 0.16] |
| Intergroup contact with asylum seekers | 0.10 | [0.02, 0.19] | 0.11 | [0.03, 0.20] | 0.11 | [0.03, 0.20] | 0.11 | [0.02, 0.19] | 0.11 | [0.02, 0.20] |
| Task interdependence | 0.02 | [-0.05, 0.09] | 0.01 | [-0.06, 0.08] | 0.01 | [-0.06, 0.08] | -0.03 | [-0.25, 0.20] | 0.01 | [-0.06, 0.08] |
| Diversity beliefs | 0.34 | [0.21, 0.47] | 0.35 | [0.22, 0.48] | 0.35 | [0.22, 0.48] | 0.35 | [0.22, 0.48] | 0.35 | [0.22, 0.48] |
| Perceived diversity | -0.04 | [-0.11, 0.03] | -0.04 | [-0.12, 0.04] | -0.13 | [-0.41, 0.16] | -0.00 | [-0.82, 0.82] | ||
|
| ||||||||||
| Status of asylum seeker within team | -0.44 | [-0.51, -0.37] | -0.44 | [-0.51, -0.37] | -0.31 | [-0.53, -0.09] | -0.44 | [-0.52, -0.37] | -0.44 | [-0.51, -0.37] |
|
| ||||||||||
| Status of asylum seeker within team x nationality diversity | -0.13 | [-0.81, 0.55] | ||||||||
| Status of asylum seeker within team x migration background diversity | 0.08 | [-0.32, 0.48] | ||||||||
| Status of asylum seeker within team x age diversity | -0.03 | [-0.04, -0.01] | ||||||||
| Status of asylum seeker within team x gender diversity | 0.13 | [-0.24, 0.51] | ||||||||
| Status of asylum seeker within team x perceived diversity | -0.01 | [-0.07, 0.06] | ||||||||
| Task interdependence x nationality diversity | -0.69 | [-1.34, -0.03] | ||||||||
| Task interdependence x migration background diversity | 0.44 | [0.06, 0.83] | ||||||||
| Task interdependence x age diversity | -0.01 | [-0.03, 0.00] | ||||||||
| Task interdependence x gender diversity | 0.08 | [-0.32, 0.48] | ||||||||
| Task interdependence x perceived diversity | 0.02 | [-0.04, 0.08] | ||||||||
| Pro-diversity norms x nationality diversity | -1.86 | [-5.94, 2.22] | ||||||||
| Pro-diversity norms x migration background diversity | 0.91 | -0.49, 2.32] | ||||||||
| Pro-diversity norms x age diversity | -0.02 | [-0.09, 0.05] | ||||||||
| Pro-diversity norms x gender diversity | -0.80 | [-2.39, 0.79] | ||||||||
| Pro-diversity norms x perceived diversity | -0.01 | [-0.20, 0.19] | ||||||||
Public service was reference category for team type; female was reference category for gender; status as a colleague was reference category for asylum seekers’ status.
Fig 1Significant interaction effect of status of the asylum seeker in one’s work team (same status vs. supervisor role) and age diversity on willingness to collaborate with asylum seekers, controlled for control variables.
Fig 2Significant interaction effect of task interdependence and nationality diversity on willingness to collaborate with asylum seekers controlled for control variables.
Fig 3Significant interaction effect of task interdependence and migration background diversity on willingness to collaborate with asylum seekers, controlled for control variables.