EU Fundamental Rights Agency report on multiple discrimination

EU MIDIS is the first European Union-wide survey to ask immigrant and ethnic minority groups about their experiences of discrimination and criminal victimisation in everyday life. The EU Fundamental Rights Agency (FRA) published its first report on multiple discrimination today.

The report EU-MIDIS Data in Focus 5: ‘Multiple Discrimination' focuses on perceptions of multiple discrimination experiences by respondents of ethnic or immigrant origin, compared with the general population. 

Within the framework of its EU-wide survey on discrimination of immigrants and minorities, EU-MIDIS, the FRA interviewed 23,500 people with an ethnic minority or immigrant background in all 27 EU Member States. Key questions on grounds of discrimination are comparable with results from a Eurobarometer survey of the majority population.

The findings show that people belonging to ‘visible' minorities, such as Roma and people of African origin, are more likely to suffer multiple discrimination - that is, being discriminated on more than one ground- than other minorities. Another relevant ground for discrimination that could increase the experience of multiple discrimination are socio-economic factors such as living with a low income.

Main results suggest that:

  • Those from ethnic minorities are on average almost five times more likely to experience multiple discrimination than those from the majority of the population.
  • ‘Visible minorities' - those who generally look different from the majority population - feel discriminated against more often and across a larger number of grounds as compared to other minorities. For example, Roma and people of African origin are more likely to experience discrimination than former Yugoslavians, those with a Russian background, and Central and East Europeans. 
  • Gender and age can have an impact on how likely a person is to suffer discrimination: for example, young ethnic minority/immigrant men tend to report high levels of discriminatory treatment.
  • Some 46% of respondents who experience discrimination on different grounds were concentrated in the lowest income quartile recorded for their EU Member State.

You can download the report below.

Share this site on Twitter Shara this site on Facebook Send the link to this site via E-Mail