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Ukrainian refugees struggling to integrate into Czech school social networks

Education

Ukrainian refugees struggling to integrate into Czech school social networks

T. Lintner, T. Diviák, et al.

Discover the challenges faced by Ukrainian refugee students in Czech schools following the 2022 invasion. This study, conducted by Tomáš Lintner, Tomáš Diviák, Klára Šeďová, and Petr Hlado, reveals how ethnic homophily impacts friendship and exclusion ties, shedding light on the nuanced experiences of these students contrary to optimistic reports from school headmasters.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
We provide a brief insight into the integration of Ukrainian refugees in school social networks in the Czech Republic following the mass migration caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Our sample contains twelve classrooms with a total of 266 students in grades 5 to 9; 21.05% of the students were of Ukrainian origin. We employed multiplex exponential random graph modelling to assess the level to which Ukrainian refugees were integrated within peer networks, capturing both friendship and exclusion ties. We then employed a meta-analytical procedure to aggregate the results from the individual classrooms and a meta-regression to study the relationship between classroom ethnic composition and the level of integration of Ukrainian refugees. We found social networks to be formed heavily along ethnic lines with strong ethnic homophily in friendship ties and a propensity of the Ukrainian students to both send and receive fewer friendship ties than their Czech classmates. We found no evidence that the Ukrainian students sent or received more exclusion ties than their Czech classmates; suggesting that the Ukrainian students did not face explicit rejection from classmates; rather, we saw a tendency of the Ukrainian students to be neglected. Our findings stand in contrast to reports from school headmasters who asserted that the social integration of Ukrainian students was seamless. We further found a higher proportion of Ukrainian students in classrooms to be related to stronger homophilic behaviour and a lower tendency of Ukrainian students to make friends. Our results therefore imply that increased classroom diversity may negatively influence the integration of refugees in social networks.
Publisher
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Jul 13, 2023
Authors
Tomáš Lintner, Tomáš Diviák, Klára Šeďová, Petr Hlado
Tags
Ukrainian refugees
Czech schools
social networks
ethnic homophily
friendship ties
exclusion
classroom diversity
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