Perceived Socio-economic Contribution of Immigrants by South Africans in Durban, South Africa

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/2663-6549/10721

Keywords:

migration, labour migration, migrant social networks, migrant economic activities, Zimbabwean immigrants

Abstract

The paper explored perceptions of the Durban community towards immigrants’ contribution to the economy. Using purposive and snowball sampling, the study applied a cross-sectional research design in which it made use of the qualitative methodology. A sample of 20 South Africans who had been working with Zimbabweans in the Durban CBD for a minimum of five years, aged between 20–60 years, were considered for this study. The study made use of in-depth interviews as a research technique. Thematic analysis was used to analyse the data and form categories of responses. Mixed feelings were shown towards immigrants’ contribution to the development of Durban, as all participants reported that immigrants in Durban are too many and there is no need for the government to allow more immigrants to come. Competition for jobs and service delivery are the main sources of conflict between immigrants and locals. The findings of this study show that immigrants are not the main contributors to crime in Durban, but they are involved in some criminal activities. As such, locals perceive the immigration laws of South Africa as not fully helping in controlling the influx of immigrants. This study recommends government, society leaders and politicians to value diversity, thus influencing community members to accept and work with immigrants peacefully. In addition, this study also recommends the need for the Department of Home Affairs to control the influx of undocumented immigrants, thereby reducing the number of immigrants on the streets.

Author Biographies

Rowan Madzamba, University of KwaZulu Natal

Mr. Rowan Madzamba is a Ph.D. Candidate (Medicine) at the University of KwaZulu-Natal. He got his master’ Degree in 2017 specializing in Epidemiology, Public health, Demography, and Population studies. His current work focuses on migrant health and traumatic experiences of immigrants as well as health care professionals in South Africa. He has written articles on child and adolescents health, teenage pregnancy University first-year experiences

Kantharuben Naidoo, University of KwaZulu Natal

Kantharuben Naidoo currently Head-Clinical Unit- Family Medicine at University of KwaZulu-Natal. Kantharuben does research in Family Practice, Law and ethics, and Primary Care. He is an advocate for women's Rights and published and Lectures on Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault including evidence collection, Children's Rights and Child Abuse, and Emergency Care Ethics. Completed Ph.D. on Ethical Dilemmas on the admission of HIV/AIDS patients to ICU HIV/AIDS. Working on Ethics of Covid-19 and ICU adm

 

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Published

2023-04-03

How to Cite

Madzamba, Rowan, and Kantharuben Naidoo. 2022. “Perceived Socio-Economic Contribution of Immigrants by South Africans in Durban, South Africa”. Commonwealth Youth and Development 20 (1):17 pages . https://doi.org/10.25159/2663-6549/10721.

Issue

Section

Articles
Received 2022-02-11
Accepted 2023-03-30
Published 2023-04-03