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Supporting the integration of refugee and asylum-seeking health professionals into the South African Health System

This dissertation explores the integration challenges faced by refugee and asylum-seeking health professionals in gaining professional recognition and accessing employment in health professions in South Africa. Despite South Africa's progressive legal framework, practical pathways for qualification...

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Main Author: Rampersad, Prashana
Other Authors: Auerbach-Jahajeeah, Jessica
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Graduate School of Business (GSB) 2026
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access_status_str Open Access
author Rampersad, Prashana
author2 Auerbach-Jahajeeah, Jessica
author_browse Auerbach-Jahajeeah, Jessica
Rampersad, Prashana
author_facet Auerbach-Jahajeeah, Jessica
Rampersad, Prashana
author_sort Rampersad, Prashana
collection Thesis
description This dissertation explores the integration challenges faced by refugee and asylum-seeking health professionals in gaining professional recognition and accessing employment in health professions in South Africa. Despite South Africa's progressive legal framework, practical pathways for qualification recognition and professional inclusion remain fragmented and exclusionary. While much of the literature focuses on low-skilled labour market integration and survival strategies, the experiences of highly skilled refugee and asylum seeker professionals are often overlooked, leading to their marginalisation and the underutilisation of their health expertise. Using a qualitative approach, the research draws on semi-structured interviews with 16 refugee and asylum-seeking health professionals in Cape Town and four institutional representatives from the South African Qualifications Authority, the Foreign Workforce Management and the Western Cape Department of Health. Vignettes are used to humanise participants' experiences and foregrounding the personal stories behind the systemic barriers to professional integration. This study is grounded in Bourdieu's theory of capital, examining how refugee and asylum seeker economic, social, cultural and symbolic capital is systematically devalued. It also incorporates critical perspectives on integration, drawing from Ager and Strang's (2008) multidimensional framework and newer research that highlight how integration can involve unequal power relationships and unfair expectations (Spencer & Charsley, 2021). In doing so, the research highlights how historical and institutional legacies; shaped by apartheid, xenophobia, and rigid bureaucracy, reproduce structural and symbolic violence that undermines refugee professionals' access to dignified work. By identifying and interrogating the structural barriers to recognition, this dissertation argues that structural barriers prevent refugee and asylum seeker health professionals from being recognised. The creation of practical and inclusive pathways to professional integration is essential for the restoration of their dignity and ability to contribute to South Africa's healthcare system. The findings offer a critical and contextually grounded contribution to debates on refugee integration, institutional power, and inclusive health workforce development.
format Thesis
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:37.862Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2026
publishDateRange 2026
publishDateSort 2026
publisher Graduate School of Business (GSB)
publisherStr Graduate School of Business (GSB)
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42632 Supporting the integration of refugee and asylum-seeking health professionals into the South African Health System Rampersad, Prashana Auerbach-Jahajeeah, Jessica Refugee and asylum seeker health professionals Professional integration South African healthcare system capital theory structural exclusion integration theory This dissertation explores the integration challenges faced by refugee and asylum-seeking health professionals in gaining professional recognition and accessing employment in health professions in South Africa. Despite South Africa's progressive legal framework, practical pathways for qualification recognition and professional inclusion remain fragmented and exclusionary. While much of the literature focuses on low-skilled labour market integration and survival strategies, the experiences of highly skilled refugee and asylum seeker professionals are often overlooked, leading to their marginalisation and the underutilisation of their health expertise. Using a qualitative approach, the research draws on semi-structured interviews with 16 refugee and asylum-seeking health professionals in Cape Town and four institutional representatives from the South African Qualifications Authority, the Foreign Workforce Management and the Western Cape Department of Health. Vignettes are used to humanise participants' experiences and foregrounding the personal stories behind the systemic barriers to professional integration. This study is grounded in Bourdieu's theory of capital, examining how refugee and asylum seeker economic, social, cultural and symbolic capital is systematically devalued. It also incorporates critical perspectives on integration, drawing from Ager and Strang's (2008) multidimensional framework and newer research that highlight how integration can involve unequal power relationships and unfair expectations (Spencer & Charsley, 2021). In doing so, the research highlights how historical and institutional legacies; shaped by apartheid, xenophobia, and rigid bureaucracy, reproduce structural and symbolic violence that undermines refugee professionals' access to dignified work. By identifying and interrogating the structural barriers to recognition, this dissertation argues that structural barriers prevent refugee and asylum seeker health professionals from being recognised. The creation of practical and inclusive pathways to professional integration is essential for the restoration of their dignity and ability to contribute to South Africa's healthcare system. The findings offer a critical and contextually grounded contribution to debates on refugee integration, institutional power, and inclusive health workforce development. 2026-01-21T07:07:27Z 2026-01-21T07:07:27Z 2025 2026-01-21T06:42:18Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42632 en eng application/pdf Graduate School of Business (GSB) Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Refugee and asylum seeker health professionals
Professional integration
South African healthcare system
capital theory
structural exclusion
integration theory
Rampersad, Prashana
Supporting the integration of refugee and asylum-seeking health professionals into the South African Health System
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Supporting the integration of refugee and asylum-seeking health professionals into the South African Health System
title_full Supporting the integration of refugee and asylum-seeking health professionals into the South African Health System
title_fullStr Supporting the integration of refugee and asylum-seeking health professionals into the South African Health System
title_full_unstemmed Supporting the integration of refugee and asylum-seeking health professionals into the South African Health System
title_short Supporting the integration of refugee and asylum-seeking health professionals into the South African Health System
title_sort supporting the integration of refugee and asylum seeking health professionals into the south african health system
topic Refugee and asylum seeker health professionals
Professional integration
South African healthcare system
capital theory
structural exclusion
integration theory
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42632
work_keys_str_mv AT rampersadprashana supportingtheintegrationofrefugeeandasylumseekinghealthprofessionalsintothesouthafricanhealthsystem